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Why Harry Potter producer David Heyman is the perfect Brit for Bond
Why Harry Potter producer David Heyman is the perfect Brit for Bond

Telegraph

time26-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Why Harry Potter producer David Heyman is the perfect Brit for Bond

Despite being the driving force behind cinematic hits such as Harry Potter, Paddington and Barbie, the chances are that you have never heard of David Heyman. That is just the way the London-born film producer likes it. 'I'm not very good at self-promotion,' he told The Telegraph in 2014. 'One of the lovely things about being a producer is being invisible.' He may not be able to remain invisible for much longer. Heyman, 63, has agreed to reboot the James Bond franchise after Jeff Bezos's Amazon spent $1 billion (£775 million) to wrest creative control of the spy series from siblings Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson. Along with fellow star producer Amy Pascal, who is behind Challengers and the most recent Spider-Man series, Heyman has one of the most daunting tasks in Hollywood: figuring out where to take Bond after Daniel Craig's 007 was killed in a hail of missiles at the end of No Time To Die. Despite its predecessor being released in 2021 – and completed a long time before then – there is no script, no director and no star for Bond 26. If anyone can tackle the challenge, it is Heyman. With his films grossing almost $14 billion, he is the second-most commercially successful producer of all time, with only Marvel's Kevin Feige making more at the box office. Meanwhile, four of his productions (Gravity, Marriage Story, Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood, and Barbie) have been nominated for the Best Picture Oscar. He is that rare thing: a producer entirely trusted by studios that also has auteurs like Quentin Tarantino, Alfonso Cuarón and Greta Gerwig queuing up to work with him. One of Heyman's best qualities is combining a populist bent with creating environments in which creative talents can flourish. It was while working as an independent producer in London that Heyman read the as-yet unpublished Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, bought the film rights and created one of the biggest franchises in history. So valuable is he to JK Rowling's Wizarding World that Heyman is also producing the forthcoming HBO TV series based on the Potter books. 'I often don't know if something will be commercial or not. Every film feels right to me, but it also feels like a gamble,' he said in 2015. 'I just know what I like, and if I like it, someone else will too. Maybe it's a kind of arrogance.' Those who have worked with Heyman see him as having the golden touch. 'His taste connects with a big public and that is a very useful thing to have,' Christopher Hampton, whose 2013 drama The Thirteenth Tale was produced by Heyman, tells me. 'He's not [the indie darling] Jeremy Thomas, he's an absolutely mainstream producer. He's an ideal choice. He's had more experience than anyone else at steering vast franchises and bringing them into port. I think it'll be great.' In particular, many have credited Heyman with steering the Potter films smoothly when it would not have been a surprise to see one of its child stars go wildly off the rails as they became increasingly famous. 'He's tremendously conscientious and has a terrific attention-to-detail,' says Hampton. 'I think he makes people working with him very comfortable.' Heyman has, for the most part, avoided becoming mired in the culture wars (save for accusations from some quarters that Barbie was an example of 'anti-man feminism'), which suggests Bond is unlikely to go woke on his watch. Instead, the priority will be making a film people want to see. He also takes risks that have, so far, paid off handsomely. Some observers raised their eyebrows when Heyman tasked Cuarón to direct The Prisoner of Azkaban, the third Potter film, soon after the Mexican filmmaker's very risqué Y tu mamá también. Yet it proved (another) hit, and Cuarón is godfather to Heyman's son, Harper. The pair reunited on Gravity (2013), an experience Heyman later described as one that 'changed my life'. Another punt that exceeded all expectations was when Heyman hired Paul King to direct Paddington when his previous track record mostly consisted of the surrealistic sitcom The Mighty Boosh; they went onto work on Timothée Chalamet's Wonka, which took $634.7 million (£492 million) worldwide at the box office. It is not hard to imagine Cuarón being roped in to direct the new Bond film. It is, perhaps, more difficult to see Heyman recruiting Quentin Tarantino (with whom he collaborated on Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood) but Tarantino is known to be a huge 007 fan and has long wanted to create a faithful adaptation of Ian Fleming's first Bond novel, Casino Royale. If his track record is anything to go by, Heyman may be the one producer capable of curbing Bezos's impatience for his first Bond film. Simon Farnaby, co-writer of the Paddington films and Wonka, says that, unlike other producers, Heyman has the ability to stand up to studio bosses. 'David doesn't go for the easy option, in fact he often goes for the hard option. He just goes 'No, work harder, see if there's a better idea.' Kicking the tyres, as he calls it, until it's as good as it can be, even if that takes a bit longer than the studio might want,' he tells me. 'He's also very protective of the writers, us against the studios. We love him, because he feels like one of us trying to create the best thing we possibly can.' While his professional life has been a succession of hits, Heyman himself has admitted that he was a 'late bloomer' when it comes to his personal life. He married the interior designer Rose Uniacke in 2006, and their son was born two years later. She also has a stepson and three children of her own from her first marriage, to the financier Robie Uniacke (who now has two children with Gone Girl star Rosamund Pike). Heyman grew up immersed in the film world. His father, John, was an agent for the likes of Noël Coward and Elizabeth Taylor before a career as a writer and producer; his mother, Norma, was also a renowned producer who was nominated for an Oscar with Dangerous Liaisons. When he was seven, Heyman served as a page boy at the wedding of his godmother, Diana Dors, to Alan Lake. The young Heyman was a student at the elite Westminster School, then studied art history at Harvard University while working as a runner on films during holidays. He worked as a production assistant on A Passage to India, David Lean's final film that his father helped produce, before taking jobs at Warner Brothers and United Artists in Los Angeles. He was eventually made redundant, never having felt like he fit in amid the bright lights of Tinseltown, and following a brief stint in New York came back to Britain to produce things his way. 'Everybody told me it was career suicide,' he said in 2014. 'But I saw an opportunity in that I'd lived in America for 17 years and yet I was British, so I spoke both languages. I felt that I could be a bridge between the two, because I understood both cultures.' Colleagues agree with this sentiment. 'David is world-class. He has delivered some of the most popular and iconic films of the 21st century and is trusted by top-level creative talent on both sides of the Atlantic,' says Danny Cohen, who worked with Heyman as an executive producer on the Fantastic Beasts films. 'He is collaborative, calm and very experienced. He understands how to reach mainstream audiences and talented people love working with him and respect him.'

Harry Potter and Spider-Man producers lined up by Amazon to oversee Bond franchise
Harry Potter and Spider-Man producers lined up by Amazon to oversee Bond franchise

The Guardian

time21-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Harry Potter and Spider-Man producers lined up by Amazon to oversee Bond franchise

Amazon is lining up Harry Potter's David Heyman and Spider-Man's Amy Pascal to oversee the James Bond franchise for its studio MGM. In news first reported by Puck, the two heavyweight producers are said to be the choice of senior Amazon-MGM executives Mike Hopkins, Jen Salke, and Courtenay Valenti and the studio is now negotiating deals with the pair. Heyman is the British producer who acquired the film rights to JK Rowling's Harry Potter book series, and produced all eight subsequent film adaptations as well as the three Fantastic Beasts films. Other high-profile credits to his name include the Noah Baumbach-directed Marriage Story and White Noise, Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, and Greta Gerwig's Barbie. Pascal was chair of Sony's film division until 2015, where she oversaw Bond films including Casino Royale, Quantum of Solace and Skyfall. She was forced to leave in the aftermath of the studio's infamous email hack after leaked messages suggested she had made racist jokes at the expense of Barack Obama. Since leaving Sony, Pascal has produced the Tom Holland Spider-Man films as well as the animated Spider-Verse spin-offs, and is now working on Gerwig's Narnia film. Amazon surprised Hollywood by buying the rights to the Bond franchise in February, paying more than $1bn to secure complete creative control from its long-term producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson. Within hours of news of the deal emerging, Amazon executive chair Jeff Bezos posted a message on social media asking: 'Who'd you pick as the next Bond?'

William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit
William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit

The Independent

time12-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit

The Prince of Wales tried his hand at being a cameraman to help students film a project on a visit to a sixth-form academy. William operated a camera while sitting on the dolly and track as he took shots for part of a film scene at the London Screen Academy (LSA) in Highbury, north London, on Wednesday. The free-to-attend academy provides students skills and training with courses in film production, costume, editing and animation – and was created to address the skills shortage and lack of diversity in the UK screen and creative industries. Among the academy's co-founders are David Heyman, producer for all eight of the Harry Potter films, and Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson who oversee the James Bond franchise. William has been the president of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) since 2010, when he succeeded the actor and director Richard Attenborough. On arriving at academy, the prince first had a sit-down discussion with senior representatives from Bafta and the LSA board, where he was told by academy co-founder Tim Bevan that it was 'very much part of the vision that education and industry should come together'. Discussing industry opportunities for young people, William said the 'film star essence… is so distant from reality', adding: 'It feels a lot of people don't know that they can be in the film industry.' The prince was then taken into the hair and make-up studio, where he chatted with an artist and one of the students working as a model – and applied prosthetics on to his hand to make an 'instant fake scar'. Year 13 students at the academy were currently working on a collaboration project which transforms the school into a working film set to shoot a short film. This year's film, Melomania, is a futuristic story about four teenage characters living in a world where music has been banned. I think to get the endorsement of a young royal is sort of fantastic, and it's inspiring for these students. Tim Bevan CBE, co-founder of London Screen Academy William asked the model: 'How is it with the studs on? Is it comfortable? 'You can't really move your eyebrows very much.' The prince smiled and waved at students taking lessons in their classrooms as he walked around the college. After being taken to the costume department, William spoke to a student displaying their 'steampunk' outfit about the design process, which he praised as being 'quite cool'. Asked if he would wear the costume personally, the prince added: 'I might do – Saturday night out, why not?' William then spent time chatting to another student involved in post-production for the project, including adding water digitally into a scene. After being shown the final result, William remarked: 'That's amazing what you can do.' The prince was then shown to the building's rooftop, where the set for the project was built and students were busy filming a scene. He took up a position on the dolly for one take, keep a keen eye on the camera equipment as the scene played out. The whole set gave a round of applause following the take before posing with William for a group photo. Asked whether he would join the production by a student before he left, William replied: 'I might need a bit of practice.' Mr Bevan, who is also co-chair of Working Title Films, told the PA news agency: 'I think to get the endorsement of a young royal is sort of fantastic, and it's inspiring for these students. 'It shows the general public that the creative industries are a career that everyone should take seriously [and] that we're good at it.' Asked how important the college was for young people as a way into the film industry, Mr Bevan said: 'I think you can only tell anecdotally and that we're noticing on productions that more of our alumni are showing up. 'It just feels like it's all beginning to creep out there into the world. We're six years into the school, so we're four years in on our alumni, so it's beginning to work.' He added: 'To see these different voices, different backgrounds, different faces, different sorts of people coming into the industry, I think it's really important. That way, we will tell better stories.'

William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit
William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit

Yahoo

time12-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

William takes up role behind the camera on film academy visit

The Prince of Wales tried his hand at being a cameraman to help students film a project on a visit to a sixth-form academy. William operated a camera while sitting on the dolly and track as he took shots for part of a film scene at the London Screen Academy (LSA) in Highbury, north London, on Wednesday. The free-to-attend academy provides students skills and training with courses in film production, costume, editing and animation – and was created to address the skills shortage and lack of diversity in the UK screen and creative industries. Among the academy's co-founders are David Heyman, producer for all eight of the Harry Potter films, and Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson who oversee the James Bond franchise. William has been the president of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) since 2010, when he succeeded the actor and director Richard Attenborough. On arriving at academy, the prince first had a sit-down discussion with senior representatives from Bafta and the LSA board, where he was told by academy co-founder Tim Bevan that it was 'very much part of the vision that education and industry should come together'. Discussing industry opportunities for young people, William said the 'film star essence… is so distant from reality', adding: 'It feels a lot of people don't know that they can be in the film industry.' The prince was then taken into the hair and make-up studio, where he chatted with an artist and one of the students working as a model – and applied prosthetics on to his hand to make an 'instant fake scar'. Year 13 students at the academy were currently working on a collaboration project which transforms the school into a working film set to shoot a short film. This year's film, Melomania, is a futuristic story about four teenage characters living in a world where music has been banned. William asked the model: 'How is it with the studs on? Is it comfortable? 'You can't really move your eyebrows very much.' The prince smiled and waved at students taking lessons in their classrooms as he walked around the college. After being taken to the costume department, William spoke to a student displaying their 'steampunk' outfit about the design process, which he praised as being 'quite cool'. Asked if he would wear the costume personally, the prince added: 'I might do – Saturday night out, why not?' William then spent time chatting to another student involved in post-production for the project, including adding water digitally into a scene. After being shown the final result, William remarked: 'That's amazing what you can do.' The prince was then shown to the building's rooftop, where the set for the project was built and students were busy filming a scene. He took up a position on the dolly for one take, keep a keen eye on the camera equipment as the scene played out. The whole set gave a round of applause following the take before posing with William for a group photo. Asked whether he would join the production by a student before he left, William replied: 'I might need a bit of practice.' Mr Bevan, who is also co-chair of Working Title Films, told the PA news agency: 'I think to get the endorsement of a young royal is sort of fantastic, and it's inspiring for these students. 'It shows the general public that the creative industries are a career that everyone should take seriously [and] that we're good at it.' Asked how important the college was for young people as a way into the film industry, Mr Bevan said: 'I think you can only tell anecdotally and that we're noticing on productions that more of our alumni are showing up. 'It just feels like it's all beginning to creep out there into the world. We're six years into the school, so we're four years in on our alumni, so it's beginning to work.' He added: 'To see these different voices, different backgrounds, different faces, different sorts of people coming into the industry, I think it's really important. That way, we will tell better stories.'

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