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Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 4)

Monday, October 31, 2011
Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 4
Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 4
image dimensions : 1200 x 750
Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 4)
Four. Hayley Atwell widescreen wallpaper photo gallery, Captain America, The First Avenger, actress, model, movie, girl, woman, hot, sexy, beautiful, photo, image, picture, wallpaper.
Hayley Atwell is serious about acting. She not only took on major Shakespeare roles and excelled in challenging theatrical plays, but she got her BA in acting at The Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where she studied from 2002 to 2005. Fresh out of the drama-school dressing room, Hayley Atwell's only credits included a tiny handful of productions for the BBC television channel in the UK. In 2006, for instance, she played the role of Catherine Fedden in The Line of Beauty. Her character was a dangerously sexy, self-harming, manic-depressive sister who took increasingly heavier dosages of lithium, and made astonishingly rude remarks toward her family and friends. Hayley Atwell then went on to finish filming the made-for-TV movie Fear of Fanny for BBC 4, and continued landing small TV roles with a part in the miniseries The Ruby in the Smoke. On June 21, 2006, Woody Allen picked the young British actress to play the female lead in his summer project. Within a few months, Hayley Atwell went from playing minor roles on TV to shooting alongside Hollywood heavyweights Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell, and became the muse of one of America’s most highly respected writer-directors of all time. The film is a crime thriller about two brothers who have such bad financial problems that they turn to a life of crime to compensate for their debts. Things take a turn for the worst and the two criminal siblings become bitter enemies. Aside from her lead role in the BBC series The Line of Beauty, Hayley Atwell appeared in The Ruby in the Smoke that same year and followed that up with the radio series Doctor Who: Blood of the Daleks, which lasted for one year. 2007 was a busy time for the always-together Hayley Atwell. In addition to serving on the jury for the 2007 British Independent Film Awards, she worked in a variety of projects, such as a theater production of The Man of Mode, a radio series called Felix Holt, the Radical as well as several movies including the TV flick Mansfield Park and big screeners like Cassandra's Dream and How About You. Hayley Atwell's 2008 project was playing the title character in Major Barbara at the National Theatre. A trip, aged 11, to see Ralph Fiennes – with whom she would later work on The Duchess – playing Hamlet was a particularly formative moment. A shy child, Atwell found that the only time she wasn’t terrified of speaking was when she was saying somebody else’s words, reading aloud in class or performing in a play. 'From a very young age, stories fuelled my imagination in the most wonderful way,’ she says. She remembers spending many hours alone in her room recreating her favourite fairy stories. 'Sometimes I would steal characters’ names from other stories and put them into mine. I felt very safe and very happy in those little worlds of my own.’ She recognises that the woman she has grown into is a product of the child who could navigate any social situations she found herself in by putting on a mask. 'When I was with my mother’s friends, I could talk fluently about Descartes. When I was with my father, I could do the New Age thing and immerse myself in ceremonies for dead spirits I had never met. When I was with my posh friends, I could be posh. When I was with my rougher friends, I could be totally street.’ 'Hayley is a real chameleon,’ says Saul Dibb, who cast her in her first television role as Catherine Fedden, the bipolar daughter of a corrupt MP in the BBC adaptation of Alan Hollinghurst’s novel The Line of Beauty. 'She can adapt to any situation with the most extraordinary ease. She is also a strong character who has the added bonus of being one of those magnetic characters that people just want to be near.’ Atwell imbues her characters with a blend of strength and vulnerability, a complexity that draws the audience in. 'No one else could have made Bess Foster, ostensibly a manipulative home-wrecker, into someone so hard to hate,’ Dibb says of her performance in The Duchess. 'I guess I do always find the shadow, the something else going on,’ Atwell says. 'I’m very bad at doing one thing because I don’t believe that any human being is just one thing.’ For Jamie Lloyd, who will direct Atwell in a Royal Court production of Alexi Kaye Campbell’s new play, The Faith Machine, this autumn, there was no other actress so well-equipped to play Sophie, an investigative journalist who sacrifices her personal objectives in pursuit of her ideals. 'Hayley has a fierce determination and a genuine wit but she’s also not afraid to go to the murkier depths,’ he says. At a read-through of the play last year, Lloyd remembers how Atwell 'turned up early, was unbelievably efficient and had also done a lot of work on the script’. 'I’m in this job for the long-term,’ explains Atwell, who lists Judy Davis, Kate Winslet and Cate Blanchett as role models. 'I take it very seriously and am very serious about getting it right.’ Every choice she makes is carefully considered. Thus, Captain America is a conscious step towards stardom – 'I know that being in a film like that can open up all sorts of doors that I would like opened’ – and going straight from its premiere in Los Angeles to the Royal Court rehearsal rooms in London shows a conscious commitment to keeping herself grounded while she’s about it. Atwell is not averse to the idea of heading to Hollywood, if Hollywood asks her to go. 'I am, and I feel, half-American,’ she says. 'If the work was there, of course I’d go.’ Currently single (her three-year relationship with Gabriel Bisset-Smith, a scriptwriter she met at drama school, recently came to an amicable end; she lives alone in a flat in Primrose Hill), Atwell is acutely aware that she is standing at a crossroads. 'Who knows what will happen?’ she says. 'It’s like Kierkegaard says: “Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.”’

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Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 3)

Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 3
Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 3
image dimensions : 1200 x 750
Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 3)
Three. Hayley Atwell widescreen wallpaper photo gallery, Captain America, The First Avenger, actress, model, movie, girl, woman, hot, sexy, beautiful, photo, image, picture, wallpaper.
Hayley Atwell possessed an air of natural elegance and grace that made her a favorite to portray strong-willed yet emotionally vulnerable women. After only a short time in the limelight in her native England, Atwell landed a starring role in Woody Allen's morality tale "Cassandra's Dream" (2007) as Ewan McGregor's calculating actress girlfriend. Propelled by such a high-profile role, Atwell's career gained even more momentum with starring roles in the historical films "Brideshead Revisited" (2008) and "The Duchess" (2008). But it was her breakout role as an arrogant aristocrat toppled by wartime power struggles in the epic miniseries "The Pillars of the Earth" (Starz Entertainment, 2010) that made Hollywood sit up and take notice of Atwell's talents, all of which paved the way for bigger and more exciting parts to follow. Hayley Elizabeth Atwell was born on April 5, 1982 in London, England to a Native-American father, who worked as a massage therapist, and an English mother who was a motivational speaker. Atwell's unusual childhood, which was filled with memories of tarot readings and sweat lodges, helped her get in touch with her feelings, particularly when she started training to be an actor at The Guildhall School of Drama and Music. After graduating in 2005, Atwell landed a regular role in the miniseries "The Line of Beauty" (BBC, 2006), playing the manic-depressive daughter of a disgraced politician. A few more supporting roles in television movies followed, before Atwell nabbed a major part in the Woody Allen crime drama "Cassandra's Dream," appearing as a stage actress and the scheming love interest of Ewan McGregor's character. In 2008, Atwell earned critical praise for her engaging performances in two high-profile period pieces. She first starred in "Brideshead Revisited," the big screen adaptation of the 1945 Evelyn Waugh novel about a repressed upper-class family whose beliefs are challenged after they welcome into their home a social climber (Matthew Goode) who becomes the object of affection of both Atwell's oppressed Catholic girl, as well as her brother. Atwell also played a major role in "The Duchess," which chronicled the extravagant life of the 18th century aristocrat, Georgiana Cavendish, the Duchess of Devonshire (Keira Knightley). In the visually stunning biopic, Atwell's character was involved in a steamy love triangle between the Duchess and the Duke (Ralph Fiennes). In 2009, Atwell starred in the remake of the 1960s cult sci-fi series "The Prisoner" (AMC, 2009) as one of the prisoners of a mysterious village and the woman who helped the character 6 (James Caviezel) discover the reason why he was sent to the remote island. By 2010, Atwell's talents finally gained attention stateside. She starred as the lead character's (Matthew Macfadyen) soul mate on the series "Any Human Heart" (Channel 4, 2010), based on William Boyd's 2002 novel about the life of Logan Mountstuart, a writer who encountered many of the 20th century's most significant figures. Atwell also had a lead part in the highly anticipated action-adventure film "Captain America: The First Avenger" (2011) as the superhero's girlfriend who secretly worked for the French Resistance. But her biggest coup was landing a lead role in the epic miniseries "The Pillars of the Earth," based on Ken Follett's 1989 bestseller of the same name. Set in 12th century England, the story followed the construction of a cathedral in the fictional town of Kingsbridge during the turbulent period in English history known as The Anarchy. Atwell delivered a star-making performance as a haughty and willful aristocrat defeated by religious and political strife during a civil war, a role that earned her a 2011 Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Mini-Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television.

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Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 2)

Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 2
Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 2
image dimensions : 1200 x 750
Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 2)
Two. Hayley Atwell widescreen wallpaper photo gallery, Captain America, The First Avenger, actress, model, movie, girl, woman, hot, sexy, beautiful, photo, image, picture, wallpaper.
Born in London, UK, Hayley has dual citizenship of the UK and the US. An only child, Hayley was named after Hayley Mills. Her parents, Grant and Alison, both motivational speakers, met at a London workshop of Dale Carnegie's self-help bible 'How to Win Friends and Influence People'. He was born in Missouri and is of part Native-American descent; his Native American name is Star Touches Earth. Her parents divorced when she was age 2. Her father returned to America and Hayley remained with her mother in London, but she spent her summers in Missouri with her father. Hayley's mother saw theater as an important communal experience, so she was introduced to theater from a young age. At age 11, she had memorable trip to see Ralph Fiennes playing Hamlet. She would later work with him on The Duchess (2008). She went to Sion-Manning Roman Catholic Girl's School in West London where she excelled academically. She took her A-levels at the private London Oratory School. She took two years out of her education, traveling with her father and working for a casting director. In 2005, she graduated from The Guildhall School of Music and Drama with a degree in Acting. Hayley began her career with parts on a few BBC television productions. Her first big break came in the TV mini-series, "The Line of Beauty" (2006). The following year, she got her first film role in How About You... (2007). She followed this with Woody Allen's Cassandra's Dream (2007). Her breakthrough role came 2 years later in Captain America: The First Avenger (2011). Studied at The Guildhall School of Music and Drama (2002-2005). Age 9, she walked over hot coals at a 'Power Into Action’ workshop that she attended with her mother. As a teenager, she went on anti-vivisection and Free the Dolphins marches. She became a committed vegetarian, at age 8, after seeing 'Lloyd Grossman' put a live lobster into boiling water. Her father is a shaman. 'I couldn’t believe the scale of it. It was insane.’ Much more daunting than the work was the pressure not to divulge any of the film’s secrets. 'Every day, when I got my script changes, they would have hayley printed all over them. That way, if I left them on a bus, the studio could blame me for blowing the film’s cover.’ On the eve of Captain America’s release, Atwell finds herself at an exciting point in her working life. In her relatively short career, she has played her hand well; choosing the interesting roles and, most crucially, making the most of her porcelain good looks without ever cashing in on them. Much has been made of her voluptuous sensuality, and yet Atwell has never gratuitously revealed an inch of flesh. 'I’ve always been a big believer in what you don’t see being much sexier than what you do see,’ she says. 'Do you know what? I don’t think I’m curvaceous. It’s simply that most other actresses are really, stupidly tiny. When I meet some of them, I can’t believe it. I know I’ve got curves and big boobs and I’m never, ever going to complain about that. 'Plus I love how expressive my body is. The other day, I was looking back over footage of Any Human Heart, which was made before I started training for Captain America, and I looked at myself as Freya and thought, “I like her and I believe in her. And I really believe that she loves Logan.” And there’s nothing sexier than that, is there?’ Atwell comes across as a girl who knows her own mind. From the minute she walks into the restaurant in which we are meeting, she exudes a magnetic confidence. She instantly takes control, speeding up our transition from bar to table with the calm competence of the head girl she once was. She looks neat and very pretty in flared jeans, high heels and a short woollen jacket, with not a scrap of make-up. 'One of the best lessons I ever learnt in life was from a girlfriend of mine who pointed out that if you wear make-up all the time, you lose the ability to wow when you do.’ In the eager openness of her face, it is easy to find the little girl that Atwell once was. She was an only child whose parents were motivational speakers who had met and fallen in love at a London workshop of Dale Carnegie’s self-help bible How to Win Friends and Influence People in the mid-1970s. By the time she was two, they had separated. Her father, Grant – 'a Tom Selleck lookalike’, and a photographer-turned-shaman who also goes by his Native American name, Star Touches Earth – returned to America, leaving his daughter and her mother, Alison, living like sisters in their bohemian enclave off Ladbroke Grove in west London. It was no ordinary childhood. Aged eight, after seeing Loyd Grossman put a live lobster into boiling water, Atwell became a committed vegetarian. Aged nine, she walked over hot coals at a 'Power Into Action’ workshop her mother had taken her to. As a teenager, while her friends were out experimenting with alcohol and cigarettes, she was on anti-vivisection and Free the Dolphins marches. At the rare parties that she did go to, she was happiest in the corner – preferably with someone’s parent – having a long discussion about life, love and the universe. At Sion-Manning, her comprehensive secondary school, Atwell rebelled against rebellion, taking the bookish route and excelling academically. It was not always easy, and she often found herself being bullied by fellow students for her New Age ways. 'I’d see kids fighting in the playground and say things like, “I’m sensing a lot of anger here”,’ she laughs. After her GCSEs she moved to the fee-paying London Oratory, and then on to Guildhall, a happy outcome for the girl who had only ever wanted to be an actress. Named after Hayley Mills, Atwell was exposed to film and theatre from a young age. 'Mum wasn’t at all religious but she thought that going to the theatre was as important a ceremonial, communal experience that a person could have,’ she says. 'She was always very moved by the power that it had to open your mind. I found it genuinely thrilling.’

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Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 1)

Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 1
Hayley Atwell Wallpaper 1
image dimensions : 1200 x 750
Hayley Atwell (Wallpaper 1)
One. Hayley Atwell widescreen wallpaper photo gallery, Captain America, The First Avenger, actress, model, movie, girl, woman, hot, sexy, beautiful, photo, image, picture, wallpaper.
Hayley Elizabeth Atwell (born 5 April 1982) is an English-American actress, known for her work in stage productions such as A View from the Bridge, and in films such as Cassandra's Dream, The Duchess and Captain America: The First Avenger. Atwell was born in London, the only child of Allison (née Cain), a motivational speaker, and Grant Atwell, a massage therapist, photographer, and shaman. Atwell's mother is English and her father, an American from Kansas City, Missouri, is of part Native-American descent. Atwell has dual citizenship of the U.K. and the U.S. Her parents separated when she was two years old. After secondary education at Sion-Manning Roman Catholic Girls' School, West London, Atwell took A-levels at the London Oratory School and trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama graduating in 2005. Her first feature film role was in Woody Allen's 2007 film Cassandra's Dream, in which she took the part of a stage actress opposite Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell. In 2008, she appeared in the film The Duchess as Bess Foster and the film Brideshead Revisited as Lady Julia Flyte, earning praise and nominations from the British Independent Film Awards and the London Critics Circle Film Awards. In January 2009, Atwell made her West End début in Lindsay Posner's revival of A View from the Bridge at the Duke of York's Theatre which earned her a Laurence Olivier Award nomination. Atwell appeared as "415" in AMC Television's November 2009 miniseries, The Prisoner, a remake of the 1967–68 series by the same name. Atwell played Agent Peggy Carter in the 2011 superhero film Captain America: The First Avenger.[8] MTV Networks' NextMovie.com named her one of the 'Breakout Stars to Watch for in 2011'. Please God, no more red lipstick!’ Hayley Atwell drops her head into her hands in mock despair. When she looks up again, the beautiful mouth that is the source of so much frustration has split her face into a dimply grin. It is easy to see why it has generated so much attention; it is a megawatt sort of a mouth. Lauren Bacall had one, Hedy Lamarr had one, Cate Blanchett has one. 'Hayley is a star in the old-fashioned sense of the word,’ says the author William Boyd, in whose Channel 4 adaptation of his own novel Any Human Heart Atwell’s bombshell 1940s glamour was mesmerising. Atwell, 29, has been playing period beauties fairly solidly since graduating from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama six years ago. These include Julia Flyte in Julian Jarrold’s 2008 film version of Brideshead Revisited; Bess Foster – the third person in the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire’s marriage – in Saul Dibb’s The Duchess; Mary Crawford in Mansfield Park; and Freya, the love of Logan Mountstuart’s life, in Any Human Heart. On stage, too, her roles have tended towards the old-school: she has been in Thomas Middleton’s Jacobean tragedy Women Beware Women at the RSC, George Etherege’s Restoration comedy The Man of Mode at the National Theatre, and Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge (for which she was nominated for a 2010 Olivier Award). So when the chance arose to play a gun-wielding sex bomb in Captain America, this summer’s Marvel Comics adaptation, Atwell jumped at it. 'And then I read the script and realised that it was set in the 1940s!’ A cinch-waisted, khaki-clad pin-up in the vein of an Indiana Jones heroine, Peggy Carter is a recruitment officer who falls for Captain America, an army reject who has taken part in a special experiment and been transformed into the perfect fighting machine. 'She’s sexy and feisty,’ Atwell enthuses. 'She’s immaculately beautiful but she’s also a fighter and incredibly strong. Because of that, she carries a certain amount of frustration, knowing that, if she’d been born a man, she could have been a great soldier.’ To prepare for the role, Atwell embarked on an intensive training programme. Working out for four hours a day, six days a week, and sticking to a rigid high-protein diet, she dropped a dress size. 'I felt better than I’ve ever felt in my life,’ she says. 'What struck me most, though, was the powerful effect that it had on my mind. I felt so awake, and so alive, with such a good energy. Plus, I was able to recover from hangovers much quicker.’ Open and vivacious, Atwell is good company. Questions are answered politely and thoughtfully, but always with a twinkle of mischief. 'The main reason I did Captain America was because I wanted to get out of my own head and stop taking my work so seriously. I’d had enough. I was like, “I want to train! I want to be a supergirl! I want a machine gun! I want to look fabulous and be surrounded by hunky bare-chested men! I want to make a movie that people come away from feeling amazing and invincible! I want to be Wonder Woman!” Actually, seriously, I really do want to be Wonder Woman one day…’ Recalling her five months spent working on Captain America, a $150 million film so shrouded in mystery that even its stars haven’t been allowed to see it, Atwell describes having entered almost a parallel universe.

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