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Posts Tagged ‘Olivier’

Seoul topic?

It’s perhaps no coincidence that rumours swirling around concerning China’s future stance on joint venture arrangements with western companies are taking place at the same time as the latest G20 meeting in Seoul.

Current form has multinationals required to enter into a arrangement where the Chinese partner has to have a majority in order to gain a foothold in the market that seems to occupy ever increasing acres of newsprint by the day.

However, reports out of China citing the “Sino-German Automobile Industry Forum” raise the tantalising prospect that this cosy deal may be on the point of being re-evaluated.

Those reports also mention PSA board member Gregoire Olivier as ‘showing his agreement when hearing the remarks on the spot.’

You bet. Any move to liberalise the JV environment would see a raft of automakers sit up and take immediate notice.

It’s not clear whether or not this JV split is up for discussion at the G20 beano this week in South Korea, but it’s a little coincidental the issue is being highlighted as Obama, Cameron, Jintao et al gather in Seoul.

Should even the issue be up for grabs, it’s a fair bet that every major global manufacturer will be booking a flight pretty quickly to Beijing.

Calls by just-auto today (11 November) to PSA in Paris saw the topic flat-batted back, but this issue might just start to become front of house if the great and good raise it in Korea.

Seoul topic?

It’s perhaps no coincidence that rumours swirling around concerning China’s future stance on joint venture arrangements with western companies are taking place at the same time as the latest G20 meeting in Seoul.

Current form has multinationals required to enter into a arrangement where the Chinese partner has to have a majority in order to gain a foothold in the market that seems to occupy ever increasing acres of newsprint by the day.

However, reports out of China citing the “Sino-German Automobile Industry Forum” raise the tantalising prospect that this cosy deal may be on the point of being re-evaluated.

Those reports also mention PSA board member Gregoire Olivier as ‘showing his agreement when hearing the remarks on the spot.’

You bet. Any move to liberalise the JV environment would see a raft of automakers sit up and take immediate notice.

It’s not clear whether or not this JV split is up for discussion at the G20 beano this week in South Korea, but it’s a little coincidental the issue is being highlighted as Obama, Cameron, Jintao et al gather in Seoul.

Should even the issue be up for grabs, it’s a fair bet that every major global manufacturer will be booking a flight pretty quickly to Beijing.

Calls by just-auto today (11 November) to PSA in Paris saw the topic flat-batted back, but this issue might just start to become front of house if the great and good raise it in Korea.

Why Halle Berry had her eyes on Olivier Martinez

If reports are to believed, Halle Berry had her eyes on Olivier Martinez and wanted him for their upcoming flick ‘Deep Tide.’ Before they started filming in June, “Halle sent her people to go after Martinez for the movie. She specifically requested him and told her camp to go get him,” New York Post quoted [...]

Michelle Williams As Marilyn Monroe In “My Week With Marilyn”

Michelle Williams (Not the one from Destiny’s Child) will play screen legend Marilyn Monroe in a new movie based on the iconic actress’s 1956 London film shoot opposite Sir Laurence Olivier, producers said on Friday. My Week with Marilyn — produced by The Weinstein Company and expected to open in 2011 — chronicles a week [...]

Zeta-Jones turns down Vivien Leigh role to spend time with ill hubby

Catherine Zeta-Jones has apparently turned down several movie roles, including the chance to portray Vivien Leigh, to spend more time with cancer-stricken husband Michael Douglas. The Oscar-winning actress had been approached about playing the vivacious second wife of Laurence Olivier in a film about Olivier making ‘The Prince And The Showgirl’ with Marilyn Monroe at [...]

10 Most Notorious Womanizers in History

Don Juan may be the original lady-killer, whose breeches no woman could resist, but he was a fictional lothario whose exploits were bound to the stage, or the libretto, or the page; or, perhaps, if we can find ourselves once again in this post-feminist, enlightened age, to the reveries of women desirous of a little… [...]

Michelle Williams As Marilyn Monroe “My Week With Marilyn” Movie

Michelle Williams has snagged the role of iconic screen stunner Marilyn Monroe in the forthcoming drama My Week With Marilyn, London columnist Baz Bamigboye revealed on Thursday.

The Brokeback Mountain star will play the Hollywood legend in the Simon Curtis-directed film that looks at what went on behind the scenes during the making of 1957’s The [...]

Scarlett Johansson Marilyn Monroe “My Week With Marilyn” Movie

And in news that will send Lindsay Lohan’s head popping right off her shoulders, Lost In Translation’s Scarlett Johansson, 24, is at the top of a list of seasoned actresses being considered by director Simon Curtis and producer David Parfitt to play blonde bombshell Marilyn Monroe in a new motion picture.

The Daily Mail’s Showbiz Reporter [...]

‘I want to give pleasure’

Great drama is all about constructing an argument and giving maximum pleasure, says the actor, currently juggling Chekhov and Shakespeare at the Old Vic

When did you first know you wanted to act?

That’s quite a difficult question to answer because I’ve acted all my life, really – well, from the age of eight. I did a huge amount at school and a bit at university. But I went to the Guildhall as a singer, and I also toyed with various other options. The acting sort of crept up on me. It was simultaneous; it was both the only thing I’d ever really wanted to do, and also something I’d never even considered.

Breakthrough production?

Professionally, it was when we went to the Royal Court with Women Beware Women, my first serious play in London. In terms of my perception of myself, it was The Seagull, which I did at the RSC in 1991. That was my first ever really very serious role. Up until then I’d been doing lots of comic parts.

Favourite venue?

I have loads, actually. When I was at the RSC, I loved the Swan, but you can’t complain about the Other Place. And I’m rather fond of the Olivier. I suppose those are the obvious ones.

Least favourite?

I think the Barbican – not the theatre, but the centre – because you have to spend so many hours a day there, and all the dressing rooms are underground. The theatre itself is rather beautiful, but the actual backstage area … Actors need air!

Most challenging experience?

I’ve done lots of performances I’ve not been happy with. I don’t think I was a very good Edgar [in King Lear]. In terms of challenges, the two Pinter plays I did last year [A Slight Ache and Landscape] were a departure for me. Whenever there’s a shift in repertoire, it can be challenging – Spamalot as much as the Pinters. One of the most demanding was Hamlet, for obvious reasons. But I’ve not had many unhappy experiences. Touch wood.

Favourite part of the job?

I love the construction of an argument. I love studying a great play with unquestionably great writing, like a Shakespeare play, and trying to make my mind respond in an interesting way to this extraordinary piece. So I suppose the process of rehearsal is what I most enjoy. Of course, we all love to be praised, but actually the least exciting thing is the curtain call.

How do people react at parties when you say what you do?

They’re embarrassed, usually, because if they haven’t seen you on stage, they assume you’re out of work. You always want to say, “I’m an actor, but don’t worry about it – I’m fine, honestly!”

What would most surprise an outsider about your day-to-day work?

I think people would be surprised by how much care goes into decisions, that we discuss things as thoroughly as we can, try and take arguments right down to the end of the line before we make decisions. And I think people are always surprised by the amount of time that we need in order to get anywhere near what we think the playwright means.

What advice would you give someone wanting to do what you do?

I used to be quite careful about what I said to people who asked – all that shit about “It’s very difficult, 90% of actors are out of work” – and then someone said, “Yes, but 10% are in work!” And that’s the way to look at it, really. There’s no advice I can give, except just to do it, and don’t feel ashamed if it’s what you want to do. I think to hedge your ambitions with lots of caveats about how difficult it is is unnecessary. It’s a passion. It’s a calling.

Can you put what you do into five words?

I want to give pleasure.

Is it glamorous?

No. It’s very exciting, and you meet the most extraordinary people, but it’s not really glamorous.

• Simon Russell Beale is currently appearing in The Winter’s Tale and The Cherry Orchard at the Old Vic.

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Europe’s space truck takes shape

By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter, BBC News

ATV-2 propulsion unit

"It’s clear from space history that often it was not the prototype that experienced the problems; it was the mission that came later. That’s why specific attention has to be paid to what we do now."

Nico Dettmann is in charge of producing Europe’s next space freighter.

JULES VERNE – THE FIRSTS

  • The ATV is the first completely automated rendezvous and docking ship to go to the ISS
  • The ATV is the largest and most powerful space tug going to the ISS over its mission life
  • It provides the largest refuelling and waste elimination capability for the space station
  • It is the only vehicle on the current timeline able to de-orbit the ISS when it is retired

ATV (Nasa)

He knows the near-flawless maiden voyage of the Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) last year does not mean the second flight is guaranteed to turn out the same way. Attention to detail is everything.

The follow-up ship – dubbed Johannes Kepler – is slowly coming together.

Its propulsion and avionics units are being prepared in Bremen, Germany. Its pressurised module which will hold the cargo – air, water, scientific equipment, food, and clothing – to be taken to the space station is being built in Turin, Italy.

The various segments should come together in September, into a single line of assembly that will lead to a launch in November 2010.

Then, they will fly one a year after that. ATV is no longer an experimental spacecraft; it is a production spacecraft. And to emphasise the point, if you walk through the cleanroom at EADS Astrium in Bremen, you can already see ATV-3 components.

"The whole integration process, from the first day until launch, is 28 months. So if you want to launch every 12 months, obviously you have to produce in parallel," explained Mr Dettmann.

ATV-2 avionics bay (BBC)

The space freighter has huge significance for Europe.

On one level, it is the "subscription" Europe must pay to be part of the International Space Station "club". If Europe can deliver about six tonnes of supplies a year to the platform, it is guaranteed six-month residencies at the ISS for its astronauts.

But ATV has also been a test of European competency. It is the biggest, most sophisticated vehicle the bloc has ever flown in space. Its automatic rendezvous and docking technology allows it to find its own way to the station and attach itself without any human intervention.

The European Space Agency (Esa) believes the vehicle’s capabilities will feed into many other exploration activities, at the Moon, Mars and other Solar System destinations. Esa is even looking into the possibility of upgrading the robotic truck so that it can carry people – an independent European crew transportation system.

Astrium Bremen is in sole charge of manufacturing Johannes Kepler. The company’s Les Mureaux plant in France had a bigger role on the previous vehicle (known as Jules Verne) but with the switch to routine production, it was felt the lines of responsibility should be simplified.

"In the past, we had one organisation dedicated to development and one to production. At the end of Jules Verne, it was decided to have just one organisation in order to have maximum consistency going forward," said Astrium’s ATV project manager, Olivier de la Bourdonnaye.

"All of what we did on the Jules Verne adventure belonged to the development of ATV; and it finished a couple of months ago with the post flight analysis."

Germany carries about 50% of the production effort; and all the sub-contractors – including Europe’s other major space concern, Thales Alenia Space – are reporting direct to the German centre.

Very little is having to be changed on ATV-2, such was the success of Jules Verne.

There were only two significant hardware issues.

One, early in the flight, saw the vehicle’s propulsion system switch to a back-up chain when anomalous pressures were detected in the complex network of pipes and valves that feed the engines. The other saw a segment of thermal blanket on the exterior of the craft lift away from its Velcro fittings.

Neither event affected the mission and are easily remedied on Johannes Kepler.

Intergrated Cargo Carrier (BBC)

Perhaps more significant was the slight mismatch that occurred in the advanced GPS systems used on ATV and the Russian Zvezda module on the ISS to align the vehicles prior to docking. Had the discrepancy been more serious, Jules Verne could have been triggered into aborting its approach to the platform.

It wasn’t – and a software correction on the Russian side should fix this issue before Johannes Kepler arrives in 2010.

The ship will be heavier this time – by some 600kg. This will take it over 20 tonnes, making its launch the heaviest payload in the history of Esa missions.

The supplies ATV-2 carries will be gratefully received: with six permanent residents now living on the platform, Europe’s logistics effort is paramount (the US shuttle should be close to retirement by November 2010).

Its role in boosting the ISS will be significant, also. With no shuttle visiting the station, only the ATV will have the power to lift the platform higher into the sky to avoid the drag from residual air molecules at the top of the atmosphere.

"We’re supposed to lift the station significantly because after the shuttle retirement the ISS will raise its average altitude from 330-350km to almost 400km to produce less drag," said Mr Dettmann.

"Today the ISS altitude is linked – let’s say – to low shuttle performance. After shuttle is gone, ISS can fly higher but ATV will have to deliver a major part of that altitude increase."

  • Total cargo capacity: 7.6 tonnes, but first mission flew lighter
  • Mass at launch: About 20 tonnes depending on cargo manifest
  • Dimensions: 10.3m long and 4.5m wide – the size of a large bus
  • Solar panels: Once unfolded, the solar wings span 22.3m
  • Engine power: 4x 490-Newton thrusters; and 28x 220N thrusters
  • Development cost: 1.3bn euros; Subsequent missions: 400m euros

ATV (BBC)

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk</p


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