Kate Madison
Kate Madison | |
---|---|
Born |
Chesham, England | December 13, 1978
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Actor, Film director |
Known for | Born of Hope |
Kate Madison (born 13 December 1978) is a British independent filmmaker, director, producer and actor. She portrayed the character Elgarain in her film, Born of Hope.
Kate Madison was born in Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England but now lives in Cambridge, England. She started acting at the age of four years when her mother got her involved in a local amateur dramatic group and continued to enjoy performing as she was growing up. She attended the Netherhall School and Long Road Sixth Form College, both in Cambridge.
In trying to decide on a career, however, she chose to follow her interest in marine biology, and she enrolled in Aberystwyth University in Wales to study zoology. She completed her course of study and received her degree but realized she did not have the drive to pursue this career.[1] She discovered and joined the Cambridge Filmmakers Network (CFN) and established her company, Actors at Work Productions in 2003. It was through the CFN she became directly involved in her first two film projects.
Into the Darkness and The Horsemen
In 2005 Madison was working on a short film with the working title Into the Darkness. The lead character, Abigail (played by Jennie Fox) discovers an ancient book desired by Lucifer, and guardian angels must protect her and the mysterious book. Madison co-wrote the screenplay. Shortly after filming began, the director had to return home to the United States. He gave the task of directing to Madison, and he left for Tampa, Florida.
“It was very nerve-racking,” Madison told Jennie Kermode in an interview for Eye for Film. “I was really in at the deep end. But it turned out to be a really good decision because it was like a crash course in filmmaking and I learned a lot. Through it, I met Christopher Dane, who stars in Born of Hope, and Ollie Goodchild, who also appears in it.”[2] Madison and Dane then collaborated on a short comedy film with the improbable subject of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse. Dane portrayed Famine, Pestilence, War and Death in different costume and makeup for each. The four horsemen are the only customers at a pub and the hapless waitress, portrayed by Madison, does not know what to make of them. She also directed the ten-minute short.
Born of Hope
Madison became fascinated with The Lord of the Rings films directed by Peter Jackson, and the films were Madison’s first exposure to the works of J. R. R. Tolkien. She read Tolkien’s own notes on the main characters of Middle Earth and became intrigued about the mysterious background of Aragorn.
“When I was looking for a story to do I found those few paragraphs and the idea of a film about Aragorn’s parents and where he came from seemed a great idea,” she stated in an interview. “Aragorn is such an important character in The Lord of the Rings but we know hardly anything about him until he turns up in The Prancing Pony in The Fellowship of the Ring.”[3] From this creative spark, Madison embarked on an ambitious journey to create what was then known as a fan film that would take six years to accomplish. In 2003 she discovered a Tolkien-fan film competition and knew she had to produce a film surrounding the roots of Aragorn and the world of Middle Earth shortly prior to the period covered in the books and films. She began recruiting from her circle of film professionals within Actors at Work Productions, and their referrals of others throughout England and beyond. She brought in a screenwriter to flesh out the storyline, but the script actually evolved over a period of years and scenes were actually rewritten during filming.
Madison scouted for filming locations and discovered the West Stow Anglo-Saxon village and Epping Forest, where most of the scenes were ultimately filmed. Being familiar with Wales from her college days, she chose to film key scenes there as well. She used the bulk of her own savings to launch the project and ultimately called on donations to fund the balance. All actors performed without financial compensation as well as the production crew.
“We obviously didn’t have very much money to spend so we couldn’t exactly hire huge cranes and lights,” she told an interviewer in 2010. “Most of our camera operators owned their own cameras and I also borrowed one off friends.”[4] By 2006, Madison had produced a trailer which was shown at a Tolkien conference in Toronto, Canada. This generated interest in the film and the trailer was a fundraising vehicle. Principal photography finally began in 2008. Madison received offers to assist from professionals from around the world in providing special effects, film scoring, prop and costume donations and cash donations to keep production going.[5] Born of Hope with a running time of 71 minutes, made its debut at RingCon 2009 in Germany. Madison used the internet for worldwide release, streamed first on Dailymotion, later on YouTube, and on the film’s dedicated website.
Ren
The online success of Born of Hope with millions of views since its release generated a worldwide following of Madison’s creative works. The growth of online streaming media convinced Madison her future projects would best be served through this medium. She established a new production company, Mythica Entertainment, to produce these works. The first of these is a new fantasy web series titled Ren.
Ren will follow the life of a young girl who is marked on her face by a spirit and who struggles to find the meaning of this mark, whether it is good or evil, and to overcoming the prejudice against her. Learning from her financial trials in filming Born of Hope, Madison launched a funding campaign using Kickstarter, the crowdfunding website. She launched the campaign on July 20, 2013 with the goal of raising the £35,000 minimum need. By August 19, the goal was surpassed, raising £36,184.[6] Season One of the series will include six, ten-minute episodes and produced to be streamed over the web from the Mythica Entertainment website and possibly other online venues. The production team has spent the first half of 2014 working on story lines, scouting locations, costume production, and calls for contributors for all aspects of the series. Filming for Season One began in the latter half of 2014 and was completed by mid-November. The episode one of Season One was uploaded to the Mythica Entertainment YouTube channel March 1, 2016.
“It’s a great way for an independent film-maker to do something relatively low budget,” Madison told the Cambridge News, “and get it out there, and get people watching it. I like the fact that with the web anyone can watch what you make, and that’s how it should be for me.”[1]
The principal cast of Ren stars Sophie Skelton as Ren, Nick Cornwall as Dagron (Ren's father), James Malpas as Baynon (Ren's brother), Christopher Dane as Karn, Duran Fulton-Brown as Hunter, Grace Parry as Dalia, Alan Hay as Torberry, Dita Tantang as Lyanna, and Richard Zeman as the Kah'Nath Commander.
References
- 1 2 Fallon, Lydia (18 August 2013). "After her Lord of the Rings fan prequel Born of Hope, prepare for Kate Madison's fantasy web series Ren". Cambridge News Online. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
- ↑ Kermode, Jennie (30 December 2009). "Ring Thing (interview)". Eye on Film. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
- ↑ "A Filmmaker's Journey: Interview with Kate Madison". Festival in the Shire Journal. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
- ↑ "Kate Madison - Born of Hope interview". The Jitty. 27 April 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
- ↑ Lamont, Tom (6 March 2010). "Born of Hope—and a lot of Charity". The Observer. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
- ↑ "Ren – a brand new epic fantasy series". Kickstarter. Retrieved 13 July 2014.