- MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN MOVIE
- MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN PLUS
- MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN PROFESSIONAL
It’s just that in film, so many factors are put together to create a performance. The Academy Award is tremendous, and I don’t want to denigrate that at all. I can’t tell you how pleased I am about that.ĭo you consider the Tony a higher honor than your Oscar? And the fact that all four of us were nominated is just fantastic. Doing theater is such a specifically energetic and almost acrobatic work. I recognize that it’s the highest honor an actor can receive, and that is what has sunk in for me. You’ve had a little time to get used to being a 2009 Tony nominee.
MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN PLUS
Carnage allows Harden to display both sides of her prodigious talent: Though she’s best known for dramatic roles Pollock, Mystic River, plus a Tony-nominated performance as Harper in Angels in America, Harden has taken on comedic roles in movies like Welcome to Mooseport, American Dreamz and Drew Barrymore’s upcoming Whip It! For now, she is savoring her nomination for the acting award she feels is the most prestigious of them all. It’s a happier domestic scene than the one portrayed in Yasmina Reza’s Tony-nominated comedy, in which Harden, James Gandolfini, Hope Davis and Jeff Daniels have it out quite literally after their children get into a playground fight. “Go take a picture of your ballerina while Mommy has a phone call,” she whispers to Julitta, who obeys, chattering as she goes. Speaking from her home in Harlem, the Oscar-winning Broadway star is obviously an experienced juggler, balancing her busy acting career with raising Julitta, twin brother Hudson, and their 10-year-old sister, budding actress Eulala Scheel. Their mother was remembered in a service later in the day.Newly minted Tony nominee Marcia Gay Harden is delighted to chat about her hit play, God of Carnage, but first she has to help her five-year-old daughter, Julitta, finish making a ballerina doll. The children’s cremated remains were placed in mahogany boxes on the altar, separated by an enlarged picture Thaddeus Harden snapped of the them playing on the Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Let’s have some family time, including beer and a basketball game. He opened a worn Father’s Day card that Audrey gave him last year, and laughed as he read aloud what she had written: “Dear Dad, I love you, poppa dog. “No one can bring back my kids, but you can honor them by living every single moment like there’s no tomorrow.” This is the most grief I could have imagined, but these kids are bigger than me. They lived every moment with open arms to the fullest. “I am a lucky dad,” he repeated over and over.
MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN PROFESSIONAL
Thaddeus Harden, the father of Audrey and Sander, gave an emotional eulogy, telling the church he was grateful he is a professional photographer because he has “hundreds of pictures to remember kids by.” And the actress told anecdotes of her nephew, Sander, loving Britney Spears and his “favorite foreign country – the Catskills.” “She worked that red carpet like a pro,” Harden recalled, smiling.
MARCIA GAY HARDEN 2016 CHILDREN MOVIE
She recalled taking Audrey as her date to the movie premiere of “Mona Lisa Smile” just last week. She loved to act and he knew more dinosaur names than anyone,” remembered Marcia Harden. “Audrey wanted to be a movie star and Sander a paleontologist. The Harden family and hundreds of friends gathered at Marble Collegiate Church on West 29th Street to remember the two “precious jewels,” Audrey Gay Harden, 10, and Sander Harden, 6, who died, along with their mother, Rebecca, when a fire burned through their Astoria apartment Tuesday. “This is an unimaginable tragedy, but Audrey and Sander will live on and the good memories are what falling into complete despair.” “It was very easy to love them,” said the very pregnant actress, who although wracked with grief, remained composed as she spoke. Oscar-winning actress Marcia Gay Harden wiped away tears as she gave a passionate eulogy yesterday at the memorial service for her niece and nephew killed in a Queens house fire, calling them her “tiny angels.”