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Wireless: new HD trailer

Posted: Oct, 28, 2015

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A new trailer for Wireless has been shared on You Tube. You can see Joseph a few times, and also hear his voice throughout. 

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Mr Foote's Other Leg: opens at the Haymarket Theatre in 2 days

Posted: Oct, 26, 2015

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Joseph shared a photo of the Haymarket Theatre this morning, as preparations are underway for the opening of Mr Foote's Other Leg at the Haymarket Theatre on Wednesday 28th October. Tickets are available from here.  The play had wonderful reviews at Hampstead.

It's good to see Russell Beale snarling with vulgarity like a raddled old pole cat as he belittles Joseph Millson's handsome Garrick for his devotion to the Bard and Festival project in "Stretford," or trades affectionate insults and crude gossip with Garrick's doomed lover, Peg Woffington, deliciously played by Dervla Kirwan. What's On Stage

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Wireless: new MCM Comic Con photos

Posted: Oct, 26, 2015

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Photos from yesterday's panel for Wireless at MCM Comic Con have been shared on Twitter. Quite a few are with Joseph.

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Wireless: MCM Comic Con panel tomorrow and photos

Posted: Oct, 25, 2015

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Joseph attended MCM Comic Con in London on Friday, supporting Wireless the web series, and several photos of him have been shared on Twitter. He will be at MCM Comic Con again tomorrow, as part of the Wireless panel, and will also be available for photographs afterwards. 

 

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The Last Kingdom: UK premiere tonight on BBC2

Posted: Oct, 22, 2015

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While the BBC America broadcast began at the beginning of October, the UK finally gets to see The Last Kingdom tonight on BBC2 at 9pm.

The Last Kingdom 9pm, BBC2 Time for some Saxon violence. The BBC makes a move into Game of Thrones territory with this adaptation of Bernard Cornwell’s historical novels, in which invading Danes rampage across ninth-century Britain. This opener is heavy on prologue, with 10-year-old hero Uhtred a bystander in the Northumbrian fracas that will shape his fate. But there’s no shortage of GoT-style realpolitik, with betrayals, decapitations, mooning Vikings and, best of all, Rutger Hauer as a perpetually self-amused blind poet.

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