Friday, 28 November 2014

A Note on Today's Posts & a Preview for the Coming Week!

Hi everyone!

This has been a special and exciting week for the fan blog!

source: PAImages
Firstly, Damian Lewis received his OBE at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday. We shared the pics, news stories and interviews as they arrived that day. And, since OBE is such a special honor, we have decided to share them again today. ENJOY!

source: sohanaresearchfund.org
Secondly, Sohana Research Fund, of which Damian Lewis is a patron, started a FUN Tongue Twister Challenge last weekend. Damian Lewis took the challenge yesterday and we shared the video with you. And, we are sharing it again today! Please visit the Fund's website, get informed and get involved. Take the challenge, or just donate. 

Today is our regular blogging day, so you will see our Friday pieces just under the Tongue Twister and OBE news. Hope you enjoy the last day in our Family Week!

source: Damian-Lewis.com
Finally... We are having a special character week next week with Band of Brothers! Stay tuned for another exciting week on the blog with information about the show, the cast, pics and clips, reviews, special interviews, and so much more... 

We cannot thank you enough for visiting the blog! 
Hope you enjoy it as much as we enjoy preparing it for you. 
Happy Weekend! 

Damian Lewis takes the Sohana Research Fund TongueTwister Challenge!

Damian Lewis takes the Sohana Research Fund EB Tongue Twister challenge! And, he does it brilliantly!

See here!




Please visit Sohana Research Fund website here, get informed and get involved, take the tongue twister challenge or donate like us :) 


OBE honor and personal note

Thanks to everyone for all your clicks and views over the last days and for every day you come
and see the blog. DFI is nothing without you!! 

we are all great fans so its fantastic you always come here and we hope you have as much fun reading the blog as we have doing it.Thank you!!




you will find the pics in our gallery as well!! please have a look...


Press Roundup from UK`s Newspapers

"Yesterday, Wednesday November 26th, saw the day that Damian Lewis was presented an OBE from HRH Prince William at Buckingham palace, 24 hours on we at the DFI blog are still very excited.  
Today we took the time to go through every British National Newspaper and have pleasure in sharing with you, the photos and comments that have spread across the UK and beyond.  From the Damian Lewis Blog we hope you enjoy reading the positive comments and support from all of his fans” 





Damian Lewis talks about his OBE & more...

Damian Lewis talks about his OBE, fun conversation with the Duke of Cambridge about Homeland, and his very highly anticipated project Wolf Hall! MUST SEE!



Damian Lewis: "Now I have to be extremely responsible."


Excerpts from the Press Association News Report:



Damian Lewis has spoken of his amazement at being awarded an OBE by the Duke of Cambridge, describing the honour as a huge surprise.
...

Speaking after the Buckingham Palace investiture ceremony, Damian said, of being nominated for the OBE: "I was stupified, I had no idea, so it was a big big surprise."
The actor, who was joined at the Palace by his Peaky Blinders actress wife Helen McCrory, added: "I remember when I heard I was being awarded it, it was a little bit like 'now you've got to prove it'.
"It was a bit like being asked to be a prefect, now I have to be extremely responsible."


Prince William revealed he and wife Kate are avid watchers of Homeland, the popular drama about Lewis's character, a US marine rescued after being held captive in Iraq, and CIA officer Carrie Mathison, played by Claire Danes, who believes he has been turned by al Qaida. His character recently made a dramatic reappearance in the show after being killed off in the previous series.
Speaking about his brief chat with the Duke, Damian revealed: "He said 'Catherine and I are huge Homeland fans'.
"He said 'you appeared again the other night briefly, and we all got very excited,' which is true, but it was also on Sunday night which means he is absolutely up to date with the latest episode and I'm amazed they have time for that."


Damian spoke about how, despite his success, he has not lost sight of what first drew him to acting: 
"You should never forget the reason you went to drama school in the first place was because you were in love with the idea of story telling, entertaining people and assuming the responsibility of a story teller.
"You're in a privileged position with opportunities to educate, to incite, to challenge, to provoke, just to make people laugh sometimes is just as important.
"All the stuff that happens on top of that is great, but it's just a bonus."
All pics are from PAImages.

PICS and a few WORDS from Today's OBE Investiture Ceremony at Buckingham Palace

BBC reports: "Damian Lewis brought a touch of Homeland to Buckingham House on Wednesday as he received his OBE from the Duke of Cambridge. The 43-year-old, who will seen next year as Henry VIII in the BBC's dramatisation of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, was recognised for services to drama in the Queen's Birthday Honours."


Here is a few pics from the ceremony with Damian Lewis and the Duke of Cambridge. 








From Press Association News Report:

Damian Lewis, who was joined at the Palace by his actress wife Helen McCrory, said: "I remember when I heard I was being awarded it, it was a little bit like 'now you've got to prove it'.
"It was a bit like being asked to be a prefect, now I have to be extremely responsible."

Prince William revealed he and wife Kate are avid watchers of Homeland, the popular drama about Lewis' character, a US marine rescued after being held captive in Iraq, and CIA officer Carrie Mathison, played by Claire Danes, who believes he has been turned by al Qaida. His character recently made a dramatic reappearance in the show after being killed off in the previous series.

Speaking about his brief chat with the Duke, Damian revealed: "He said 'Catherine and I are huge Homeland fans'.

"He said 'you appeared again the other night briefly, and we all got very excited,' which is true, but it was also on Sunday night which means he is absolutely up to date with the latest episode and I'm amazed they have time for that."

And, here is Damian Lewis post-ceremony, with his wife Helen McCrory, showing his OBE.


All pics are from PAimages. 

Pic of the day

Bedtime story

have another wonderful story for the night:-)))


Tea and a Mag part three

You can easily see what attracted Lewis and McCrory to one another. They are equally charismatic: he more flamboyantly so perhaps, brimming over with husky-voiced, impeccably mannered charm; she more quietly, from a still, graceful centre flicked through with a silver tongue.
 Separately, they are engaging. Together, they are a little bit intoxicating.

And the crackle between them is tangible. "Oh, there was something in the air that was just extraordinary," remembers director Michael Attenborough of the rehearsal period of Five Gold Rings. "I witnessed two people falling for each other hook, line and sinker, which, of course, worked brilliantly in the play."
 For Gaby Dellal, who directed McCrory in the recent ITV production Leaving, in which she played a married woman who embarks on an illicit affair with a boy 20 years her junior, this happy marriage was something that had to be got past. "When we started rehearsals, I tried to talk to Helen about what it is to have an extramarital affair, and she would say: 'But Gaby, it's hard for me to know what we are talking about. My marriage still feels like the first flush of a love affair.'"

Right now, it would appear that the couple are having the time of their lives. Whether it's gathering friends and family for picnics near their home in Tufnell Park, renting cottages and swimming with their children in the mountain streams a short drive away from the location of Homeland in North Carolina, spending an entire, heady day tasting wines in the Berry Brothes vaults under St. James's or escaping to Paris for dinner, they are enjoying every glorious minute. And who wouldn't? Dancing the night away with Mick Jagger at the Met Ball, exchanging emails with Barack Obama, flying back from America to spend a surprise weekend with your children. ... These are the things that A-list memories are made of.

But, hold on, it's not all champagne and Chanel. "It's an amazing time and we are having fun," says Lewis, suddenly serious. "But making it work is not always easy."
Lewis and McCrory are, after all, simply living a high-octane version of the universal juggling act we are all trying to muster. They have a live-in nanny, but make a concerted effort to dovetail their work, so that one parent is at home at all times. McCrory, particularly, has organised her career around the children's needs from the first. "It's got to be a damn good offer to coax me away from them," she says, "Which is probably why the projects I've worked on since they were born have been such interesting ones."


With his work on Homeland taking him to Charlotte, North Carolina, for five months of every year, Lewis is the one who feels that he is missing out more on his children's young lives. The pain that this causes him is tangible. There is a tightening in his voice when he recalls a conversation with his son a few days earlier.

"I haven't even told you this," he says, looking at his wife with a furrowed brow. "I was talking to Gully about something completely different and suddenly, without even looking at me, he said, 'D'you know, Dad? When you're away, sometimes I look out of my bedroom window at night and I call your name, and I cry."

Suddenly, Lewis's jokes have dried up. "I wrestle with this. I wrestle with it," he says quietly. "Children like you being around, you see. They really just like you being around. I don't think there is any substitute for doing it well and just doing it right. And doing it right is just being there. And being good at it when you're there. No one's perfect, God knows, but being there is a good start."

On a practical level, Lewis does everything he can to ease the pain of parting. When a trip to Los Angeles coincided with Hallowe'en, he went out and bought an "absurdly scary" clown outfit, dressed up in it, and conducted a Skype call in costume. Last summer, while McCrory was performing in The Last Of The Haussmans at the National, he had the children with him for a month, two weeks with her and two weeks without. "They think America is made of hot dogs and swimming pools which, let's face it, isn't far from the truth."

Although it crossed the couple's mind for a moment to go to live in America (Gulliver was born there during the two years that Lewis spent making Life), they fell committed to a life in London. "As much as we may look like power-hungry, mad people, we are very committed, first and foremost, to living our life," says Lewis. "And if you're going to live your life, where do you want to live it? L.A. is interesting but it's not one of the great places. It's an inferior city to London. And if I'm going to be five months of the year in North Carolina, then were do I want to be when I'm not there? The answer, very much, is London."

"To sustain a marriage in our world," says Michael Attenborough, who himself has been married for 28 years and whose parents, Richard Attenborough and Sheila Sim, have been married for almost 70, "you have to make very conscious and deliberate decisions. Both Damian and Helen are very sharp about holding on to the centre of their family and not letting go."

One of the main reasons the couple want to remain in England is that their own families -- to whom they are very close -- also live there. The daughter of a Glaswegian diplomat father and a Welsh mother, McCrory had a peripatetic childhood but came to boarding school in England when she was 15. Lewis, who lost his beloved mother in a car crash in 2001 (just as his career was taking off after Band Of Brothers), was brought up in St. John's Wood and is very close to his three siblings. Christmas this year will be spent at his brother's house with "hordes of noisy children." "And noisy adults, for that matter," his wife adds.

"It was always one of my fantasies," Lewis says. "The fantasy of the family. The happy, slightly chaotic, noisy family life. In a tumbledown house. Sunday roasts, and friends coming round, and walks with the dog -- which we don't have yet but, by the way, is part of my fantasy. That fantasy was as formed in my mind as any other fantasy about falling in love with a beautiful, talented actress and whisking her off to Paris to propose. It was all very formed in my mind and I feel, I feel ..."
"... Happy with the way your plan has panned out?" laughs McCrory.
"Yes. Well, yes. Because I always pursued my fantasies. I was never interested in fantasies remaining fantasies. They were always so formed in my imagination that I couldn't not chase them."
At this point, Lewis is talking to his wife, who is gazing at him with that look of love again.
"Oh, God!" he laughs. "You're holding my hand. I feel like we're in a Rob Reiner movie."
"I feel like we're applying for a visa," says McCrory. "And the interviewer's going to say, 'I'm terribly sorry but the Foreign Office does not think that this is a legitimate marriage.'"

If it is almost too good to be true, this neat union becomes something much more normal as the interview tails off and the inevitable planning of the week begins. Tomorrow, it turns out, the nanny is having a day off ("I'm on duty," says McCrory).

 Which is fine, except that it means that she won't be able to come with him tomorrow night.
"Why? What's happening tomorrow night?" Lewis wonders.
"Jonathan Ross," she says. "I was going to come with you."
"Oh, but I haven't asked them if you can."
"No, no! Not in the Green Room. I just wanted to watch the recording."
"Oh, yes. Yes. That would be lovely, poppet."
"But I can't."
"Why not?"
"Because we've got no babysitter." McCrory looks at me conspirationally, one exasperated mother/diary service to another. "But, never mind, I'll just stay in and watch you on the telly."
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis. Just exactly the same as you and me. Almost.

Wintertime...

sourcethemavehotel.com


source damian-lewis.com


source visitlondon.com

Damian..

source justshared.com

Wintertime in New york

source mymodernmet.com


businessinsider.com

source cielbleumedia.com

Wednesday, 26 November 2014

The First Visual from Today's OBE Investiture Ceremony

Here is Damian Lewis looking good in his morning suit showing his OBE!

Congratulations!


BIG thanks go to Paco Hansel (@PacoHansel84) for sharing the Vine video on Twitter. 
He tweets: "OBE just revealed that the Duke of Cambridge is a big fan of . coming soon"

Stay tuned for more updates, pics and videos. We will bring them to you as they arrive...

Royal Central News

The Duke of Cambridge will present actor with his OBE at the Investiture ceremony today for services to Drama.

source:






DAMIAN LEWIS TO GET PALACE HONOUR

Morning Headlines....

Homeland star Damian Lewis will be awarded an OBE by the Prince of Wales today for an acting career that has brought him fame across the globe.
The actor has become a household name for his roles in the popular US series Homeland and the Second World War saga Band Of Brothers.
Lewis, 43, who is married to actress Helen McCrory and has two children, will be honoured for services to drama at a Buckingham Palace investiture ceremony.

Damian Lewis is receiving his OBE today at Buckingham Palace!




PS. Please stay tuned for news and updates here on DFI! 

Pic of the day..

Bedtime story




get yourself a bed time story....it will be a real treat

Tea and a mag part two

Lewis is never more than a few sentences away from a joke --
 "a great sense of play," according to his Homeland co-star Claire Danes -- and it falls to his wife, three years his senior at 44, and herself a master in the art of the deadpan ("The really good thing about having babies, as I did, when you're 75 is that you've had a chance to establish your career first"), to gently praise his achievements. 
Thus, when Lewis admits how eaten-up he would have been if he had turned down the television show and watched another actor enjoying the heady levels of success he is currently experiencing, she puts a firm hand on his arm and purrs: "But darling, the point is that it wouldn't have been so brilliant if you hadn't done it."

Even if you don't happen to be one of the millions of people who describe Homeland as the greatest, edge-of-your-seat television show of the modern era, you have to admit that McCrory is right. Lewis's Brody is a masterful creation: a soldier turned terrorist turned double-agent with an inscrutable inner landscape and a flawless American accent. So flawless, in fact, that fans who approach him -- constantly, and with no regard for the fact that he might be in the middle of his lunch -- can't quite believe he's English.

And for all its intrusiveness, and it is intrusive, McCrory looks on or sometimes doesn't look on at all, with a deft mixture of pride and disinterest. Because she, of course, is a hugely successful actor in her own right -- a theatre great, most would say, with a very healthy television and film career to boot. "She's the real deal," says Richard Eyre, who directed here in a National Theatre production of Trelawny Of The Wells, for which she won an Ian Charleson award when she was just 24 years old. "I've never seen her act and not been absolutely captivated."




McCrory had carved out her own rock-solid career well before 2003, when she met and fell in love with Lewis in the rehearsal room of Five Gold Rings at the Almeida Theatre (they played illicit lovers). In the nine years since they got together, she has given birth to two children (an exhausting 14 months apart), committed herself to spending a large chunk of what she calls "the Calpol years" being there for them, and still managed to make her mark in films like Harry Potter (Narcissa Malfoy), The Queen (Cherie Blair) and Skyfall (Clair Dowar, MP). Just this summer, she earned rave reviews for her performance as Libby in Simon Beresford's debut, The Last Of The Haussmans, at the National Theatre and is currently playing the lead role of Aunt Polly in next autumn's hotly anticipated prime-time BBC drama Peaky Blinders.

Is it a coincidence that this couple's respective, already well-established careers seem to have soared since they found each other? Is there something to be said (think Dolce & Gahbana, Simon and Garfunkel, Brad and Angelina -- whatever you will) for the power of two?
"It was actually a PR person's idea that we got together," says Lewis, taking a thoughtful sip of red wine before putting an arm around his wife's shoulder and pulling her across the banquette towards him. "She's a Scientologist and I'm a Mormon."

"We've managed to create our own cult," drawls his wife.

to be continued

Damian ....

Wintertime in London





sources visitlondon and venere.com

Dear Daddy

 It’s been a long time since we have spoken to each other.
You’re gone for years by now and there are still moments when I miss you dearly.
 Not every day but sometimes, it’s right that time heals but often I wish we could have a talk.
 When I think of you these days than mostly remember your smile, a warm but always a bit
boyish. When you smiled or laughed there were always this beautiful sparkles in your eyes.
You were an attractive man with your dark curly hair and the crispy voice.
you were a politician and it was always easy  for you to deal with women a little bit too easy….
I guess it wasn’t always nice and smoothly to be your wife.
But I remember your smile in the best possible way.it was your way to thank me or to tell me
that you were proud of me.

I was so often very proud of you .you were a very charismatic man and in public you were
the man who lead the crowd. At home you showed a different face because you had to deal with uncertainty   
and a slight depression.
 I don t know why you felt that way because you were educated the old fashioned way that a man doesn't talk about feelings very much.
  Unfortunately you educated me the same way. Outside the charming Darling and inside….is nobody else’s business. That can be problematic, to hide or repress your feelings can make you lonely or
you give every time the impression everything is cool and nothing really bothers you but that’s unnatural.
It was a hard lesson to learn because you need to re-educate yourself and you have to go step by step forward to trust people. You need patient friendsJ
 Daddy I wish you had been able to do the same but you went your way and you had to do.
We had a few deep talks during your last years and I was sure we could build up on that but we simply hadn't enough time , you died soon after our last great talk where we really got closer to each other.

I remember whenever we had guests we could be sure you would find a way to talk about London
the big love in your life and the only thing you were fiercely excited about.

I was every time horribly bored about your stories and the fact that your greatest wish was to show me your London scared me more than it impressed me, I had zero interest in a trip to the UK.
  Then you died and two months later I went on my first trip to London, why?? Good question maybe
I was hoping to be nearer to your dreams and hopes there. I wanted to understand you.
I remember as if it were yesterday. I arrived at Waterloo station saw a cab outside and an older
man smiled reserved but nice when I passed him and it felt like homecoming.


I felt free and explored a complete new site of myself there and luckily that feeling never left me.

And till today I feel I am close to you sitting at Tower Bridge watching the boats on the River Thames
and thinking your soul and spirit is back in London the city you always loved.
I truly hope you having a fabulous time Dad.

source cityguide.com

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

DFI team wishes Damian Lewis a wonderful day tomorrow!





BREAKING NEWS! Damian Lewis is receiving his OBE tomorrow at Buckingham Palace

source: Damian-Lewis.com

Damian Lewis was given an OBE (Order of the British Empire) in the Queen's Birthday Honours on June 13, 2014. 

And, he is receiving his OBE on November 26, 2014 (tomorrow) at Buckingham Palace.

Here is a news report of what Damian Lewis said of receiving the honour back in June: 

"I was very surprised but very happy to accept. I decided to do the very un-British thing of accepting the compliment."

Lewis, 43, who is married to actress Helen McCrory and has two children, said his family were "delighted, when they stopped asking what it was for". Damian said he thought he would take his father with him to the investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace. “I don't think you ever stop trying to impress your parents and I hope they will be proud and enjoy being there with me to celebrate the honour.

For those of us that are not familiar with what an OBE is, here is some information from the Official Website of the British Monarchy:

"It was created during the First World War in 1917 by George V.

The King recognised the need for a new award of honour which could be more widely awarded, in recognition of the large numbers of people in the British Isles and other parts of the Empire who were helping the war effort both as combatants and as civilians on the home front.

For the first time, women were included in an order of chivalry, and it was decided that the Order should also include foreigners who had helped the British war effort. From 1918 onwards there were Military and Civil Divisions, as George V also intended that after the war the Order should be used to reward services to the State in a much wider sense.

Today the Order of the British Empire is the order of chivalry of British democracy. Valuable service is the only criterion for the award, and the Order is now used to reward service in a wide range of useful activities." 

You can see the complete list of 2014 honours here which states that Damian Watchyn Lewis is given an OBE for his services to Drama. 

Congratulations, Mr. Lewis, we are extremely happy for you!

And, dear fans, stay tuned for updates :)