The full interview with Tom Burke
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If Tom Burke looked at me like this, I’d be dead on the floor. 🫠
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Aramis: What's wrong?
D'Artagnan: I just got a look from Athos. Sometimes, I wish I knew...
Aramis: *interrupts* Here...
The Many Faces of Athos: A Beginner's Guide
D'Artagnan: ...
D'Artagnan: *eyes light up*
Aramis: *smugly* You're welcome!
[Sorry, I'll see myself out now...]
Source
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imagine entering the delirious era of a 24 hour Ruth Wilson play and then Tom Burke walks onstage at 1am in a hospital gown
(pics stolen from twitter and will delete if the owner gets mad at me)
Edit entitled ‘they grow up so fast’:
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Interviewer: In 2006, you had the opportunity to work with another Burke, your son Tom, in “Number 13,” the M. R. James Christmas ghost story. Was that the first time you ever worked with Tom on screen?
David Burke: The first time we worked together professionally. When Tom was still at school, we used to do performances in the village hall.
Anna Calder-Marshall: We’d make them up, in secret, just comedy, clowning, poems…we’d do Victoria Wood sketches.
David: Tom was brilliant at that.
Anna: Brilliant…we’d work them up over Christmas … We worked so much together as a threesome. I mean we did show after show … we must have done about 8 or something.
Interviewer: Do you think Tom would ever give the role of Dr. Watson a try?
David: I think he has too much charisma.
Interviewer: I was gonna say, I think he could probably play Holmes …
David: He actually does a speech…
Anna: … Holmes, as Jeremy Brett. He’s an incredible mimic. He learned it for one of our shows.
From David Burke: A Sherlockian Conversation (2022)
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“Watching Burke…can break your heart, because this is not acting, it is being.”
- Hilton Als, The New Yorker (review of The Crown, November 2020)
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Cormoran Strike x Robin Ellacott: The Song of the Western Men
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“Living” reminds us what it means to live
...The visual approach of the film further places it beyond the traditional roots of its story. With cinematography by Jamie D. Ramsay, there are moments of beautiful symmetry found that maintain the terse feeling of 1953 London, and in equal measure, there are evocative framings and spacings that drive the feelings of shifting paradigms and emergent fear in Mr. Williams’ dreaded sentence. Throughout a bender early on, led by the incredibly impactful (and unfortunately a bit underused) Tom Burke as insomniac erotica writer Mr. Sutherland, we see side-by-side the jubilation and coziness of swinging bars and burlesques and the stark dread that falls across these hedonistic scenes and Burke’s face—it’s a visual dichotomy with a lasting impression...
Art Critique
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That smile......
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Tom Burke...just because
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Nine years ago today January 19, The Musketeers premiered. ⚜️
One of the best series ever! Love the cast and characters as well.
Credit to Original Creator
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This could be something new for each of us. A new story. A new life.
I’d love you to come.
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Tom at the international premiere of “Klokkenluider” in Tallinn yesterday.
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