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  Intermediate Unit 2 Audio Script

  UNIT 2  Recording 1

 

R = Rosie (A film historian)              P1 = 1st presenter                   P2 = 2nd presenter

 

P1:              Hi and welcome to The Film Show, where today we’re looking at the Hollywood biopic and why it’s become so popular. Now, Hollywood has always used true stories in its films. In fact, they began making successful films in the 1920s, and since then there have been thousands of films based on true stories.

 

P2:              That’s right, but in recent years, there’ve been more and more biopics. Directors have turned to the lives of famous people as a source of material. So, why is it that some of the best films in recent years have been based on true events, or inspired by real people?

 

P1:              Today, we’re talking to Rosie Truman, an actor and a film historian. Rosie, why do you think Hollywood is doing so many biopics?

 

R:              Well, one reason is that it seems that audiences really enjoy films about people that they already know something about, but they want to know more. So, from these films we’ve learned something. We’ve learned about the difficult lives of some of the biggest music legends, like Ray Charles and Johnny Cash. We’ve learned about their history and how they grew up. And we’ve learned about the lives of politicians, like George Bush, or sporting heroes, like Muhammad Ali. It’s a way in which Hollywood can actually teach us about history in an entertaining way. And it’s interesting.

 

P2:              Yes, I think that’s right.

 

  UNIT 2  Recording 2

 

R = Rosie (A film historian)  P1 = 1st presenter  P2 = 2nd presenter

 

P2:              But what about the actors, Rosie? I mean, many of the actors have won Oscars for their roles in these films. What’s it like for them?

 

R:              Well, I think actors just love these roles. I mean, that’s another reason why the films work so well. For an actor, this is a great challenge – you know, taking on a role like this. And it’s very exciting to be asked to play a character who everyone already knows. Look at Helen Mirren. She won an Oscar for her role playing the Queen, and it’s probably one of her greatest successes.

 

P1:              Oh, absolutely! And I mean there have been some fantastic performances.

 

P2:              Yes, that’s right ...

 

P1:              So, how do they do it? How does an actor prepare for a role like this? Do they get the chance to meet the person that they’re going to play? I mean … What happens?

 

R:              Well, yes, obviously, if that person is still alive, then that’s a great way for the actor to study the character: how this person moves, how they respond to people. In fact, I know that Helen Mirren met the Queen for tea, you know, very English. And she has talked about how this really helped her to understand her character. And Will Smith, who played Muhammad Ali … well, when they met, they got on really well, and ... and they became friends.

 

P2:              But what about playing a difficult character, like George Bush, for example?

 

R:              Yes, it’s funny actually, when you’re playing a character everyone knows, you have to work really hard at it. And especially on the voice, to get it exactly right. Josh Brolin played George Bush. And when he was preparing for the character, he talked to himself all day in a Texan accent. He even phoned up hotels in Texas, just so he could learn the accent.

 

P1:              Really? That’s funny. What about actors who can’t meet the character in person? What do they do?

 

R:              Well, there are lots of other ways to prepare. Audrey Tatou, for example. She played Coco Chanel. So she couldn’t meet her in person, but she watched hours and hours of film footage. She watched her in interviews, and she looked at the photographs. In a way, you have a little bit more freedom to do what you want with the character, when people are not so familiar, you know, with how the person behaves, and with their voice. Tatou wanted to look like Coco Chanel when she was on screen, so that we would recognise the image.

 

P2:              That’s right. And it was a beautiful film.

 

R:              It was, and you know one of the things …

 


  UNIT 2  Recording 3

 

R = Rosie (A film historian)  P1 = 1st presenter  P2 = 2nd presenter

 

P1:              Hi and welcome to The Film Show, where today we’re looking at the Hollywood biopic and why it’s become so popular. Now, Hollywood has always used true stories in its films. In fact, they began making successful films in the 1920s, and since then there have been thousands of films based on true stories.

 

P2:              That’s right, but in recent years, there’ve been more and more biopics. Directors have turned to the lives of famous people as a source of material. So, why is it that some of the best films in recent years have been based on true events, or inspired by real people?

 

P1:              Today, we’re talking to Rosie Truman, an actor and a film historian. Rosie, why do you think Hollywood is doing so many biopics?

 

R:              Well, one reason is that it seems that audiences really enjoy films about people that they already know something about, but they want to know more. So, from these films we’ve learned something. We’ve learned about the difficult lives of some of the biggest music legends, like Ray Charles and Johnny Cash. We’ve learned about their history and how they grew up. And we’ve learned about the lives of politicians, like George Bush, or sporting heroes, like Muhammad Ali. It’s a way in which Hollywood can actually teach us about history in an entertaining way. And it’s interesting.

 

P2:              Yes, I think that’s right.

 

P2:              But what about the actors, Rosie? I mean, many of the actors have won Oscars for their roles in these films. What’s it like for them?

 

R:              Well, I think actors just love these roles. I mean, that’s another reason why the films work so well. For an actor, this is a great challenge – you know, taking on a role like this. And it’s very exciting to be asked to play a character who everyone already knows. Look at Helen Mirren. She won an Oscar for her role playing the Queen, and it’s probably one of her greatest successes.

 

P1:              Oh, absolutely! And I mean there have been some fantastic performances.

 

P2:              Yes, that’s right ...

 

P1:              So, how do they do it? How does an actor prepare for a role like this? Do they get the chance to meet the person that they’re going to play? I mean … What happens?

 

R:              Well, yes, obviously, if that person is still alive, then that’s a great way for the actor to study the character: how this person moves, how they respond to people. In fact, I know that Helen Mirren met the Queen for tea, you know, very English. And she has talked about how this really helped her to understand her character. And Will Smith, who played Muhammad Ali … well, when they met, they got on really well, and ... and they became friends.

 

P2:              But what about playing a difficult character, like George Bush, for example?

 

R:              Yes, it’s funny actually, when you’re playing a character everyone knows, you have to work really hard at it. And especially on the voice, to get it exactly right. Josh Brolin played George Bush. And when he was preparing for the character, he talked to himself all day in a Texan accent. He even phoned up hotels in Texas, just so he could learn the accent.

 

P1:              Really? That’s funny. What about actors who can’t meet the character in person? What do they do?

 

R:              Well, there are lots of other ways to prepare. Audrey Tatou, for example. She played Coco Chanel. So she couldn’t meet her in person, but she watched hours and hours of film footage. She watched her in interviews, and she looked at the photographs. In a way, you have a little bit more freedom to do what you want with the character, when people are not so familiar, you know, with how the person behaves, and with their voice. Tatou wanted to look like Coco Chanel when she was on screen, so that we would recognise the image.

 

P2:              That’s right. And it was a beautiful film.

 

R:              It was, and you know one of the things …

 


  UNIT 2  Recording 4

 

1              I lived, I’ve lived

 

2              We met, We’ve met

 

3              He decided, He’s decided

 

4              They spent, They’ve spent

 

  UNIT 2  Recording 5

 

1              I lived there for ten years.

 

2              We’ve never met before.

 

3              He won an Oscar.

 

4              They’ve spent all the money.

 

5              You decided to stay.

 

6              I’ve learnt a lot.

 

  UNIT 2  Recording 6

 

P = Presenter              N1 = 1st news clip                            N2 = 2nd news clip

N3 = 3rd news clip                            N4 = 4th news clip

 

P:              Hello. I know what I was doing. Do you?

 

N1:              Buckingham Palace has announced the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. The Princess, who was thirty-six, died late last night in a car crash in central Paris.

 

N2:              It’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.

 

N3:              Breaking news in here at five live. There are reports that a plane has crashed into the World Trade Center in New York. That’s a plane is reportedly crashed into the World Trade Center in New York, setting it on fire …

 

N4:              President Kennedy and Governor John Connally of Texas were shot today from an ambush as President Kennedy’s motorcade left the centre of Dallas ...

 

  UNIT 2  Recording 7

 

W = Woman  M = Man

 

M:              OK, so, tell me all about it ...

 

W:              Well, in the beginning, I was at home, and ... um ... this was just one morning before a very important interview …

 

M:              Uh-huh.

 

W:              And … um ... I didn’t feel well, so my mother had given me some pills, and um ... then I didn’t think anything more about it. So, anyway, erm ... I then got on to the tube, um ... to go for my interview.

 

M:              Right, and what happened then?

 

W:              Well, um ... clearly I must have fallen asleep, because I wasn’t feeling great by this time. And um, I’m starting to feel sleepy, so I’m thinking I must have fallen asleep. Anyway, erm ... I was getting some funny looks, even before I fell asleep, but anyway. I fell asleep, and then I realised, before long, um ... I must have been having a dream, I suppose, about my mother. And all of a sudden, I’ve woken up, but I haven’t just woken up, I’ve woken up shouting the word, ‘Mum!’.

 

M:              No! You’re joking!

 

W:              At the top of my voice, in a packed, quiet tube.

 

M:              Oh no!

 

W:              Yes, and everybody’s staring at me, and that did not help, er, matters. Anyway, I’ve got off the tube, and I’ve then arrived at my interview, put all that behind me, I’m not, I’m still not feeling a hundred per cent perfect, but nevertheless arrived at my interview on time, and go in, and think, actually ‘This is going rather well. They’re not saying an awful lot, and come to think of it, they’re looking at me in a rather strange way.’

 

M:              Right …Then what?

 

W:              Well, the next thing I knew, I have left the interview, and said ‘thank you very much for seeing me, blah-di-blah ... and gone to the ladies’ room. And there in the mirror, I could see what everyone was looking at, and why they couldn’t say anything,

 

M:              What was it?

 

W:              My face had swollen up!

 

M:              Ah! No way!

 

W:              It was bright red, and …

 

M:              No!

 

W:              and covered in blotches, spots …

 

M:              Oh! You’re kidding!

 

W:              Yes, and the pills that my mother had given me were so out-of-date that they had caused an allergic reaction ...

 

M:              Oh! How embarrassing!

 

W:              ...

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