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Stage Beauty

  • 2004
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Claire Danes and Billy Crudup in Stage Beauty (2004)
Home Video Trailer from Lionsgate
Play trailer2:25
2 Videos
33 Photos
Drama

A female theatre dresser creates a stir and sparks a revolution in seventeenth century London theatre by playing Desdemona in Othello. But what will become of the male actor she once worked ... Read allA female theatre dresser creates a stir and sparks a revolution in seventeenth century London theatre by playing Desdemona in Othello. But what will become of the male actor she once worked for and eventually replaced?A female theatre dresser creates a stir and sparks a revolution in seventeenth century London theatre by playing Desdemona in Othello. But what will become of the male actor she once worked for and eventually replaced?

  • Director
    • Richard Eyre
  • Writer
    • Jeffrey Hatcher
  • Stars
    • Billy Crudup
    • Claire Danes
    • Rupert Everett
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Eyre
    • Writer
      • Jeffrey Hatcher
    • Stars
      • Billy Crudup
      • Claire Danes
      • Rupert Everett
    • 106User reviews
    • 65Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Stage Beauty
    Trailer 2:25
    Stage Beauty
    Stage Beauty
    Trailer 2:12
    Stage Beauty
    Stage Beauty
    Trailer 2:12
    Stage Beauty

    Photos33

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Billy Crudup
    Billy Crudup
    • Ned Kynaston
    Claire Danes
    Claire Danes
    • Maria Hughes
    Rupert Everett
    Rupert Everett
    • King Charles II
    Derek Hutchinson
    Derek Hutchinson
    • Stage Manager
    Mark Letheren
    • Male Emilia…
    Tom Wilkinson
    Tom Wilkinson
    • Thomas Betterton
    Ben Chaplin
    Ben Chaplin
    • George Villiers II - Duke of Buckingham
    Hugh Bonneville
    Hugh Bonneville
    • Samuel Pepys
    Jack Kempton
    • Call Boy
    Alice Eve
    Alice Eve
    • Miss Frayne
    Fenella Woolgar
    Fenella Woolgar
    • Lady Meresvale
    David Westhead
    David Westhead
    • Harry
    Nick Barber
    Nick Barber
    • Nick
    Stephen Marcus
    Stephen Marcus
    • Thomas Cockerell
    Richard Griffiths
    Richard Griffiths
    • Sir Charles Sedley
    Zoë Tapper
    Zoë Tapper
    • Nell Gwynn
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Sir Edward Hyde
    Robin Dunn
    • Butler
    • Director
      • Richard Eyre
    • Writer
      • Jeffrey Hatcher
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews106

    7.110.9K
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    Featured reviews

    smoothhoney1265

    I'm running out of words

    When the British make a costume drama it is simply a feast for the senses: Luminous colours in the most beautiful shades of red, gold and brown, costumes full of little details and precious jewelry and a great music score that takes you straight to Shakespearian and Bronte England. Now, a new precious jewel of the British cinema comes to film theatres and from my first impression it could be the best film of this year (well, at least until the new Harry Potter comes out).

    The topic is more or less familiar from "Shakespeare in love": It is the drama of this time when women wanted to act on stage but only men were allowed to do so. While "Shakespeare in love" showed this drama from a female point of view, "Stage Beauty" deals with a man whose life falls to bits and peaces when a woman plays a woman and achieves a change of law which now allows women to act on stage.

    Ned Kinaston (Billy Crudup) is a stage beauty, means: A male actor who is skilled in and specialized on strictly performing female roles. He had done so for years, can do it like no other and play nothing else. He is a star and the best stage beauty in London. Like every star, Ned has someone who cares for him, knows all his wishes on and behind the stage and holds his feet on earth: It is Maria (Claire Danes), the girl who cares for his wigs, his make-up and his costumes. Maria does not only love Ned, she lives for the theatre and dreams to be on stage herself. One night she "borrows" Ned's costumes and wig and makes her dream illegally come true on a little stage. She is a full success and so sets the wheels in motion: A duke has seen her performance, a duke who has connections to the king and soon the law is changed: Women are allowed to act on stage now. Kinaston sees the end of his career and drowns in despair. But it is Maria again who might save him.

    A fascinating tale about men in dresses, women in tights and the theatre in Shakespearean England. But "Stage Beauty" is so much more. It is about two people whose heart belongs to the theatre and who are so deep into it that reality and fiction is sometimes a dangerous mix. It is about a man and a woman who find their way in a time where this way seems not to exist. It is dramatic, sometimes wonderfully romantic and fragile, very entertaining and simply beautiful.

    Hands down for Billy Crudup's performance: This beautiful man is not bad as a woman, but basically the film celebrates his male beauty. When he is on stage he's incredible and when he's off stage he's simply hot but also convincing when facing the greatest crisis of his life (in his role I mean). But actually the person carrying the film is a fantastic Claire Danes. Once again she is playing Shakespeare, this time not Julia but Desdemona. She is strong, she is beautiful, she is courageous but also sympathetic. The supporting cast is what every director and viewer can only dream of: It includes Tom Wilkinson, Rupert Everett, Hugh Bonneville and Ben Chaplin.

    If you haven't seen this film yet, do so, it's a great experiences. It enchants, it gives your dreams wings, hope and strength. And is great entertainment, too.
    8yoyomagoo

    The bad and the beautiful

    Stage Beauty is another adaptation of a play. Yawn? Well don't, because it also happens to make a highly successful transition from stage to screen thanks to the genius that is director Richard Eyre.

    It tells the tale of Ned (Billy Crudup), a young actor who specialises in portraying women on stage. In a world where only men are allowed to tread the boards, Ned's "Desdemona" (from Shakespeare's Othello) is the closest thing 17th century audiences get to femininity in theatre. However, a young upstart in the form of Maria (played by Clare Danes) wants to change all that. She has a passion for drama and unfortunately the bisexual Ned. With the help of King Charles II (Rupert Everett), she may just get her wish, changing theatre forever, and hopefully pick up Ned on the way.

    When thinking of the themes of the film, many people dismiss it as a clone of Shakespeare in Love. This is unfair- the film is more thought provoking, substantial and better acted than the aforementioned Oscar snaffler. It explores themes of sexuality and gender with insight and intelligence as well as telling (and, in fact enthralling us with) a love story. As previously referred to, the acting is exceptional, especially the two leads (Danes and Crudup) who shine. The supporting cast is strong too, with Richard Griffiths as a heterosexual prequel to his role in Withnail and I, Tom Wilkinson brimming with quiet intensity as Betterton and Everett hamming it up wonderfully as the King.

    Even if it does end on a slightly trite note (not to give too much away, but its' "birth of method acting" shtick irritates), Stage Beauty is a funny, heart-warming and occasionally quite cerebral meditation on love and art. What more could any theatre, or film lover for that matter, want? And don't say Shakespeare In Love!
    8bondgirl6781

    Sexy, smart, romantic...a movie for actors and playwrights

    I had heard of the film through tadbloid and celebrity headlines of how Billy Crudup left his seven month pregnant girlfriend, Mary-Louise Parker, for Claire Danes. I wasn't interested in the film, but then my sister got the DVD for her birthday. I saw it for the first time over the week and I have been watching it over and over again. What a beautifully written story about acting, gender, theater, illusion, romance, and discovery of one's own identity. During the Restoration of England under the reign of King Charles II, women were finally given the freedom and right to perform on the stage whereas before the decree it was illegal and obscene for a woman to perform on stage.

    Ned Kynaston (Billy Crudup) is the greatest actor and the most beautiful "woman" of the English stage. He played several women's part and his most famous is the role of Desdemona in William Shakespeare's Othello. He is studied, admired, loved, and envied by his dress keeper, Maria (Claire Danes). She watches from the wings and longs to act and she does so behind Kynaston's back and in low pubs before a royal official, the Duke of Buckingham (Ben Chaplin). Then the chain of events unfold as Maria is introduced to Charles II (Rupert Everett) and his mistress Nell Gwyn (Zoe Tapper) who then declares that women will be given the freedom to perform in theater.

    As Maria's fame rises and women are playing more and more of the female roles, Ned Kynaston (the last of his kind of actors) is casted aside. As an actor and as man, Kynaston had learned to suppress all masculinity in order to gain the grace and beauty of a woman. He knows only how to portray women and he is lost in learning to play male roles. But then again Maria is unable to play the role of Desdemona as a real woman. Both Kynaston and Maria fall in love and into passion as they learn from each other their own sexual identities and to channel their femininity and masculinity.

    I fell in love with the film's story and with the performances of Billy Crudup and Claire Danes. As Kynaston, Crudup reveals vulnerability and strength as a man who discovers himself as a man (and a very hot one at that) through the role and eyes of being a woman. As Maria, Danes is beautiful and real: those tears are real! She can cry on cue and with the heartbreak of a real woman in love and envious of the man she loves. Maria is a strong, forthcoming, and in way a modern actress ahead of her time. She is not an "Eve" from All About Eve, she is a Viola Delesop from Shakespeare In Love, but real. The love scene between Danes and Crudup is sexy, tender, and passionate showing that explicit sex and nudity is not always necessary. They look into each other's sides and truly learn from each other as man and woman.

    This is a highly recommended film for those who love acting, period pieces, or just if you want to see a really good film, "Stage Beauty" is very much the film to watch.
    livewire-6

    Seventeenth-century Stanislavsky

    "All the world's a stage," wrote the Bard, "and all the men and women merely players that strut and fret their hour upon the stage."

    "Stage Beauty" is set in the world of seventeenth-century Restoration theatre, but the stage serves as a microcosm for life itself, and the roles played by the actors before the public mirror the roles they play in their private lives. The question is, do they create their roles, or do their roles create them?

    Ned Kynaston (Billy Crudup) is an actor who takes on women's roles, since real women are not permitted to do so. He has been thoroughly trained and schooled in the then highly stylized technique of portraying women -- to such an extent that any trace of masculinity seems to have been drummed out of him.

    His dresser Maria (Clare Danes) yearns to be an actress herself, but is prevented from doing so by the narrow conventions of Puritan England -- until Charles II is restored to the throne and decrees that, henceforth, real women shall play women's roles on the stage. A whole new world opens up for Maria, but it looks like curtains for Ned.

    What happens next is pure anachronism: Ned and Maria are able to rise above the limitations and constraints of their era. Not only do they transcend their gender or sex roles, but they overcome their classical training and, in effect, engage in Method acting, a technique still three hundred years away in the far-distant future. When he teaches Maria how to break the mold and play Othello's Desdemona in a whole new, natural way, Ned becomes a seventeenth-century Stanislavsky.

    But, by George, it works. Their performance of the celebrated death scene from "Othello" sends shock waves through an audience accustomed to pantomime and exaggerated gestures -- and it electrifies us as well.

    Not since Joseph Fiennes and Gwyneth Paltrow in "Shakespeare in Love" have an actor and actress so shimmered and shone simultaneously on stage and screen. One hopes that Billy Crudup and Clare Danes will be remembered for their luminous performances at the 2005 Academy Awards.
    MadKittenz

    This film didn't receive its due worth

    This film came and went in the cinema I go to. I went to see it on the last day it was on (which really wasn't very long at all) and I absolutely loved it. I don't think this film got the praise that it deserved. Billy Crudup has the perfect face for a Stage Beauty - he is effeminate in costume, yet a stunning man without the visage he dons for his Desdemona. Claire Danes pulls off her part wonderfully, especially the scene after she 'rescues' Crudup from the tavern, and the final rehearsal scene for Othello. Rupert Everett plays a wonderfully divine King Charles (with his little spaniels) and Zoe Tapper plays the ex-orange seller to perfection. The comedy and more emotional scenes in the play combine brilliantly. Bravo to all involved in this truly great film. If you didn't get the chance to see it in the cinema, I certainly recommend you to go out and rent it!

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    Related interests

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Claire Danes and Billy Crudup became a couple after the filming of this movie. Crudup left his long-time girlfriend Mary-Louise Parker for Danes.
    • Goofs
      Ned Kynaston, age 20-something, says that he's been playing women on stage for half his life, since he was a child. But at the royal banquet, the King says that the theatres have only recently reopened after an 18-year shutdown caused by the Puritan takeover.
    • Quotes

      King Charles II: Why shouldn't we have women on stage? After all, the French have been doing it for years.

      Sir Edward Hyde: Whenever we're about to do something truly horrible, we always say that the French have been doing it for years.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Shall We Dance?/Taxi/Raise Your Voice/Stage Beauty (2004)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 29, 2004 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • BBC Worldwide Ltd. (United Kingdom)
      • Lions Gate Films
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Compleat Female Stage Beauty
    • Filming locations
      • Hampton Court Palace, East Molesey, Surrey, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Lionsgate
      • Qwerty Films
      • Tribeca Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $782,383
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $38,654
      • Oct 10, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,307,092
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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