Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. www.imdb.com › name › nm0540067Brian Mallon - IMDb

    Actor: Gettysburg. Brian Mallon is known for Gettysburg (1993), Gangs of New York (2002) and Gods and Generals (2003).

    • Actor
    • Brian Mallon
    • Frank Jastrzembski
    • Did you know much about Hancock or the Civil War before agreeing to portray him? Very little about Hancock, but a fair bit about the war.
    • How did you get the role in the film? I was doing an Irish play in Hollywood, which won seven awards, and [Gettysburg director] Ron Maxwell came to see it.
    • How did you prepare for the role? Reading and more reading. I got right on it and read several biographies. Sam Elliott [who played Union Brig.
    • Any fond memories or favorite scenes? Of my own scenes, I particularly liked the one with Sam Elliott. Knowing that at the time of the war, California was a fairly new state, I chose to use an archaic pronunciation of it in my scene.
  2. Jan 5, 2022 · RECORDED January 5, 2022 and originally aired on www.Patreon.com/addressinggettysburg. "Gettysburg" actor Brian Mallon (Winfield Scott Hancock) called in from his home in Ireland to talk about...

    • 64 min
    • 1757
    • Addressing Gettysburg
  3. Gods and Generals is a 2003 American epic war drama film written and directed by Ronald F. Maxwell. [2] It is an adaptation of the 1996 novel of the same name by Jeffrey Shaara [3] and prequel to Maxwell's 1993 film Gettysburg. Most of the film was personally financed by media mogul Ted Turner. [4]

  4. Brian Mallon is an American film and theater actor of Irish descent. A native of Detroit, Mallon is primarily a stage actor, having performed on both sides of the Atlantic.

  5. Brian Mallon is a stage and film actor who speaks Irish and Welsh. He has performed in plays by Brian Friel, Mark Jenkins and others, and appeared in Gods and Generals, The Informant and Gangs of New York.

  6. People also ask

  7. Mar 25, 2016 · Brian Mallon’s epic novel chronicling the life of Shane ONeill, the 16th century Irish chieftain, is reviewed by Fionnula Flanagan. Here is the great dark cloak of Irish Elizabethan history spread out before us.