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mengif · 1 year
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Hugh Dancy in Deadline Gallipoli 1.01
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k-wame · 2 months
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HUGH DANCY as Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett 2015 · Deadline Gallipoli · S1·EP1 · dir. Michael Rymer
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buumbaby · 5 months
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hugh dancy warm ups
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mistikfir · 1 year
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Deadline Gallipoli (2015)
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hannibal-76 · 1 year
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I've been re-watching Deadline Gallipoli and damn Hugh really had to wear a mustache and make it sexy as f*ck 🔥
And please the suspenders!! 🌋
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Stockbridge Councilman Elton Alexander is hosting Women's History Month Honors on Sunday, March 5th at the Merle Manders Conference Center located at 111 Davis Road in Stockbridge, Georgia. McDonough Mayor Sandra Vincent is our Keynote Speaker as the first African-American Mayor in McDonough history. This FREE event starts at 3pm! Register now at the link below. Stockbridge is giving women their flowers now! ❤️💯🌹
REGISTER TO ATTEND THE EVENT BY CLICKING THE LINK BELOW:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/8th-annual-womens-history-month-event-tickets-534876468917?aff=ebdssbdestsearch
LuAnn Burns Memorial Award Honorees
Yasmin Ashmeade
Raquel Moss
Alicia Alexander Glass Ceiling Award Honorees
Captain Karen Anderson, Ph.D.
Tamika Kendrick Henry E911 Director
Michelle Amarra. SCB TV
Kenya Simmons T & J Industries
Women’s History Month Award Honorees
Aubrey Kekiwi Southern Grace Hospice
Ga House Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick
Laura Luker Henry Convention & Visitors
New Faith Christian Church Laurona Phelps
Mayor Pro Tem Yolanda Barber
Dr. Erica McCrae
Melissa Ellis
Allison Randall Berewa
Melissa Robinson Henry County Communications Dir.
Community Organization of the Year
Henry Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta
Mother’s Love and Father’s Love Honorees
Michael and LaTaucha Harris
*Parent of Braves Star Michael Harris II
Tereon and Will Anderson
Parents of Alabama Football Star Will Anderson Jr.
Stockbridge Police Officers-Special Glass Ceiling Award Honorees
Detective Nicole Allen
Detective Cornelia Acousta
Detective Yoruba Calhoun
Lieutenant Marquita Driskell
Staff Sergeant Tiffany Hudson
Crime Scene Investigator Teanndras Miller
Crime Scene Investigator Laveeta Oliver
Police Officer Tiffany Wilson
Keynote Speaker-McDonough
Mayor Sandra Vincent
Host-Portia Bruner Fox5 Atlanta
#Stockbridgega #McDonoughga #LocustGroveGa #Hamptonga #henrycountyga #LocustGrovega #StockbridgeAmphitheater #Gacities #Municipal #Stockbridge #womenshistorymonth #women #atlanta #georgia #womenshistorymonthhonors
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wouldgraham · 4 years
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Hugh Dancy as Ellis Ashmead Bartlett in Deadline Gallipoli
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moronphiliac · 2 years
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Hugh Dancy as Ellis Ashmead-Barlett in ‘Deadline Gallipoli’ (part 1/2)
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violentdelvghts · 3 years
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HUGH DANCY ▸ FILMOGRAPHY
ㅤ↳ㅤDeadline Gallipoli (2015)
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victorineb · 4 years
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Ok well now I might have to write this...
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interstellarflare · 4 years
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Deadline Gallipoli || Behind The Scenes
Deadline Gallipoli is an Australian period drama centred around the ANZAC landing at Gallipoli. The show’s perspective follows the journey of four war correspondents; Charles Bean, Phillip Schuler, Keith Murdoch and Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett.
The two-part series was originally released in 2015, with the cast line up of Joel Jackson (Charles Bean), Sam Worthington (Phillip Schuler), Hugh Dancy (Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett) and Ewen Leslie (Keith Murdoch). For people who are fans of World War history, or the Gallipoli Campaign in itself, I would highly recommend watching the show. The cast presents amazing talent in the portrayal of these journalists, and the show as a whole is incredibly well-produced.
The Journalists
Charles Bean (1879-1968)
~Portrayed by Joel Jackson~
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Captain Charles Edwin Woodrow (C.W.E.) Bean was Australia’s official war correspondent, born 18th November 1879, Bathurst New South Wales, Australia. His family moved to England when he was ten, where he evetually completed his education at Oxford.
Returning to Australia in 1904, he was admitted to the New South Wales Bar, where he travelled around the state as a barrister’s assistant. Having explored journalism, Bean joined The Sydney Morning Herald as a junior reporter in January 1908. He published several books during this time before being posted to London in 1910. Bean returned to Australia three years later, now as the lead writer to The Sydney Morning Herald.
When World War One began, Bean won a ballot hosted by the Australian Journalists Association, in which he became Australia’s official correspondent to the AIF (Australian Imperial Force). He accompanied the first convoy to Egypt, having written several reports on the behaviour of the Australian and New Zealand soldiers during the Cairo Riots. Bean landed at Gallipoli 1915, and had begun making a name for himself as a very thorough and brave correspondent. 
He was later injured during the Gallipoli campaign in August, however he chose to remain on the campaign, only leaving a few days before the last of the troops at Gallipoli were evacuated.
(Sources: Australian War Memorial Collection, Australian War Memorial - Charles Bean)
Phillip Schuler (1889-1917)
~Portrayed by Sam Worthington~
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Phillip Frederick Edward Schuler was born in 1889, and was a war correspondent for the Melbourne newspaper The Age. He travelled to Egypt with the first contingent of the AIF, and filed several stories throughout July and August 1915, centred around the Gallipoli campaign.
Schuler is known for his photographs taken throughout the campaign, which documented the outcomes of the campaigns progression as well as exposing the Australian public to the horrors of war, the pointlessness of the campaign, whilst also exposing the bravery of the ANZAC soldiers. He met Charles Bean on board the HMAT Orvieto, bound for Alexandria in Egypt.
Schuler later joined Bean on the shores of Gallipoli in late July, arriving just in time in order to cover the August offensive. Schuler also took care of Bean after he was wounded, before later returning to Australia in 1916 and writing two books; Australia in Arms and The Battlefields of ANZAC.
Schuler later returned to the war in 1916, enlisting in the AIF and fighting on the Western Front in France and Belgium. He was wounded at the Battle of Messines in 1917, and unfortunately succumbed to his wounds.
(Sources: National Museum of Australia, National ANZAC Centre)
Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett (1881-1931)
~Portrayed by Hugh Dancy~
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Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett grew up with a military background, and was a war correspondent for several later wars such as the Russo-Japanese War (1904) and the French Campaign in Morocco (1907). It made sense that he was eager to join the Dardanelles Campaign.
He was granted special permission by Winston Churchill to correspond the outcome of the Gallipoli landing, at the time working for The Daily Telegraph in London. He arrived at the Dardanelles just in time to report the landing at ANZAC Cove.
Bartlett’s report of the landing was the first to reach Australian shores. He would later be sent back home to London for breaching censorship legislation, and was carefully watched and monitored by representatives from the War Office.
(Source: ANZAC Portal)
Keith Murdoch (1885-1952)
~Portrayed by Ewen Leslie~
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Born in Melbourne, 12th August 1885, Keith Arthur Murdoch suffered from a debilitating stammer throughout his childhood.
He worked for the Melbourne newspaper The Age after completing school, before travelling to Europe in the hopes of receiving treatment for his stammer. He returned to Australia in 1908, one again working for The Age. Murdoch was a founding member of the Australian Journalist Association, established in 1910 which held the ballot for official war correspondent to the AIF. Murdoch narrowly lost the ballot to Charles Bean, but would later travel to Gallipoli in 1915 and arrive shortly after the August offensive.
Murdoch supposedly transported a letter written by British journalist Ellis Bartlett, which outlined the details of the chaotic campaign and breach several censorship laws. Bartlett’s letter was intercepted, however, Murdoch supposedly wrote one of his own which eventually reached Australian and British politicians. 
The letter is often credited with the dismissal Commander Ian Hamilton, the man in charge of the Gallipoli campaign, as well as credited with the eventual evacuation of ANZAC troops from the Dardanelles.
(Source: Australian War Memorial Collection - Keith Arthur Murdoch)
The Show Itself
The show itself is incredible. Having the Dardanelles Campaign portrayed through the perspective of the journalists themselves paints the campaign in an entirely new light. It shows the horror the Australian and New Zealand troops went through at Gallipoli.
The choice of actors for the journalists is uncanny. It is a perspective in film that we don’t see regularly, and allows the audience to become familiar and form a meaningful connection with Bartlett, Bean, Schuler and Murdoch. Their passion to report the war as they saw it is a major factor throughout the show. British Command created secure censorship laws, which meant that of they were to be breached, the journalist responsible was removed from the Dardanelles Campaign immediately.
A lot of the accounts from Bean, Bartlett and Schuler were censored beyond comprehension. It was their aim to attempt to inform the Australian and British public of the travesty that was the Gallipoli campaign. Most the their work wasn’t even published because of the strict censorship laws in place.
From the perspective of the journalists, Deadline Gallipoli truly highlights the incompetency of the British Command, the brutality of war, and the horrific conditions that the soldiers and themselves experienced. It is emotional in parts, and highly graphic, but that is to be expected in a war-historical drama.
Is It Worth Watching?
One-hundred percent, yes.
For anyone interested in learning about the Gallipoli Campaign, it is an absolute must. These journalists are practically responsible for the evacuation of troops from Gallipoli. Again, having the campaign shown through the perspective of the war correspondents is an amazing and brilliant decision. Whilst it is interesting to follow along from the perspective of one of the soldiers fighting at ANZAC Cove, it is insightful to explore another angle.
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jenacar · 5 years
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Hugh Dancy in Deadline Gallipoliu (2015)
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livingthegifs · 5 years
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Hugh Dancy in ‘Deadline Gallipoli’.
By: thejennire
Check the Tags!!! [x]
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mistikfir · 1 year
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Deadline Gallipoli (2015)
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thejennire · 6 years
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Deadline Gallipoli, 2015
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Change thy mind since she doth change, Let not fancy still abuse thee.
Hugh Dancy longing...
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