Ringer Spy J.R. dug up a very interesting picture from www.popcornlive.co.uk which shows ToyBiz’s Witch King-figure in full armour. Why is this interesting? Remember the reports about Aragorn fighting Sauron at the end of The Return of the King? See the resemblance between the Sauron we saw in the prologue from The Fellowship of the Ring and this figure right here? Could it be that Aragorn will be fighting this fellow? We can only speculate, but in the meantime, check out the picture in our scrapbook! TINY SPOILER!

Update! Toy Biz have requested this photo be removed, on account of it being an early prototype which may not represent the actual final appearance of the Witch King in the film.

If you are thinking about ordering tickets to the London Science Museum Lord of the Rings Exhibition (the one we reported about earlier today), but have some unanswered questions, fear no more! Ringer Spy Isadora spent some time talking to the people from the Museum, and here’s what she found out! [More]

If you are thinking about ordering tickets to the London Science Museum Lord of the Rings Exhibition, but have some unanswered questions, fear no more! Ringer Spy Isadora spent some time talking to the people from the Museum, and here’s what she found out!

I just talked to the press office of the Science Museum in London in order to check out and clarify a number of details regarding the upcoming LOTR-exhibition in London. Thought you might be interested, so here we go:

Booking Hotline: Open seven days a week from 08.30 h to 18.00 h (local time). Due to massive demand during the first few days, lines will be open this week until 21.00 h.

During the first few days it will take you a lot of patience to get through in the first place (it took me several hours to succeed). Once you make it through, you will be asked to press “0” on your phone in order to book tickets for the exhibition. Once you have done that, be prepared to wait some more in the queue (another 20 min in my case).

The press office strongly advises to wait a few days before calling the booking lines to allow the initial demand to subside a little. This of course making it easier for people to get through and make their reservations.

Please have paper and pencil ready as you will be requested to write down the booking reference number for your tickets. Also please keep your credit or debit card ready at hand.

Booking process: During the booking process you will be asked for the date and time at which you will like to see the exhibition. You will also be asked for your name and postal code, and then you will be asked to give your credit card number and the validity date. Once reservation has been confirmed you will be asked to write down the booking reference number.

Booking price includes ticket price as well as booking fee.

Tickets will NOT be send to you. You will be asked to give your booking reference number at the entrance the day you wish to visit the exhibition in order to collect your tickets.

Tickets are timed tickets. If, for example, you asked for a ticked for 11.00 hours, you need to be there by 10.30. Please take into consideration that you very likely will have to queue at the entrance as well as the ticket booth, where you collect your tickets.

Booking in advance: The Science Museum accepts bookings up to January that means you will already be able to book tickets for the entire run of the exhibition.

Max. number of tickets? There is no limit as far as the number of tickets is concerned you would like to buy.

Exhibition catalogue? Sorry, there will be NO exhibition catalogue for the LOTR-Exhibition. However, you will be able to have your picture taken on Gandalf cart and take it home with you.

Can I bring my camera? NO. No cameras, bags and mobiles will be allowed in the exhibition.

How much time do I have to look around once I am inside the exhibition? There is no time limit. Press office suggests that you reserve about 1,5 hours for the entire exhibition.

Apart from the telephone hotlines will there be a chance to book tickets online? According to press office they are working on that one, right now they are dealing with a few technical problems, but hope to come up with an online booking option some time soon.

Methods of payment: Credit and debit cards are accepted, no DINER and VISA ELECTRON.

Demand for the tickets is HUGE! Is there a danger of the exhibition being sold out? NO. Press office would like people to know that there will be enough tickets at hand regardless of the massive response they have experienced throughout the past few days.

Long time Ringer Athena_hobbitmaiden dropped us a note, sure to please the Trek/Rings fanatic: William Shatner’s official website has a string of LOTR discussions… including some comments from The Man himself. [More]

Lord of the Rings star Miranda Otto is on the brink of international stardom, but that hasn’t stopped her putting love and her personal life ahead of her career. [More]

Lord of the Rings star Miranda Otto is on the brink of international stardom, but that hasn’t stopped her putting love and her personal life ahead of her career.

After the break-up of her last serious relationship, The Lord of the Rings star Miranda Otto vowed she’d never go out with an actor again. They can be too high maintenance, too insecure and, sometimes, far, far too competitive. Yet, five months after tripping down the aisle with fellow actor Peter O’Brien following a whirlwind romance, she can only shrug and laugh ruefully. “Rules,” she happily exclaims, “are there to be broken!”

“Marriage? It’s just great!” she says now, talking publicly about her relationship for the first time. “It feels so nice to have made that commitment to somebody and to be able to move on with the rest of your life. It’s a great feeling that you’ve formed a partnership and are always ready to work through things together.”

The love affair smoldered in a slow start for the chameleon-like star of Australian films such as Love Serenade (1996), Doing Time for Patsy Cline (1997) and Dead Letter Office (1998), who has gone on in the past few years to forge a successful international career, topped by winning the strongest female lead in the second and third films of The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Working opposite 2003 Silver Logie award-winner Peter, one of the stars of Network Ten’s hit series White Collar Blue, in the successful Sydney stage production of A Doll’s House last year, she found herself attracted to him. Yet she had determined to never again go out with an actor after the end of her long-term liaison with fellow thespian Richard Roxburgh.

On the day the play closed, April 28 last year, Peter, 43, asked Miranda, 35, out. “I hadn’t even known if he liked me!” says Miranda, smiling softly at the memory. “I didn’t want to get involved with someone I was working with, as it can spoil the dynamic on stage, and I’d said I’d never go out with another actor. I did like him, but I had no idea he felt the same way.” “Yet if you meet the right person, it’s really very easy. From the beginning, we discovered we had so much in common. We feel the same way about things, and we like many of the same things. We were also both at a stage in our lives where we weren’t going to say, ‘I’d better keep shopping around. I might be missing out on someone else’.”

“ We were both ready to commit to somebody, but it did feel frightening. I’d been on my own for two years and it had been fantastic. I’d gotten to the point where I thought I’d never have another relationship. But then Pete came along…”

An engagement soon followed and, just eight months after their first date, on New Year’s Day this year, they walked down the aisle of Sydney’s St Mary’s Cathedral.

Even as her own career soars, with the much-anticipated The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, due to be released this December, and her latest movie, the new Australian comedy Danny Deckchair – in which she plays the stunning romantic heroine – on July 31, she’s reached the stage of thinking about starting a family.

“It’s something I want to do, but it’s a little scary” she confides “Having lived so much of my life by myself, it’s something I will do, definitely, but it’s such a big thing, it’s long-term. Being older, I think about it now and imagine finding it hard to keep up by the time they’re teenagers. But then I know nothing can really prepare you for it”.

Miranda gazes thoughtfully at the salt cellar on the table of the café we’re at in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, not far from the home she shares with Peter. A slight, waif-like figure in blue jeans and dark T-shirt, with a cascade of strawberry blonde curls, she’s just devoured a huge mid-morning plate of scrambled eggs and toast. She doesn’t usually eat this much, she explains apologetically, but she’s due at the gym soon and felt she had to prepare for the endurance test ahead.

Although filming of the three The Lord of the Rings epics in New Zealand finished some time ago, she is about to fly back over the Tasman to re-shoot some scenes. It means that a self-confessed physically lazy person such as Miranda, who hasn’t so much as looked at a dumbbell since the first shoot, is thrown straight back into a heavy gym regimen in order to match her previous physique. With her character, Eowyn, involved in so much swordplay – “It’s wonderful for releasing aggression, particularly since I have such a bad temper!” she purrs sweetly – that training is vital.

“But it is a bit of a shock to the body” she adds, sighing. “When I was in New Zealand for the six months of shooting, I did something everyday, so I got really fit. Now I’m trying to regain that, but it’s a year since I’ve even been for a run.”

Yet it’s precisely that kind of challenge on which Miranda thrives. She’s never gone for the easy options.

Growing up almost in the theatre as the daughter of award-winning actor Barry Otto and former radio and theatre actor Lindsay, she would have known the life of an actor wasn’t a comfortable one. “But I think it was in her blood,” says her dad, who worked opposite her for the first time in Dead Letter Office. “She was exposed to so much of it at an early age, it was easy to get the bug. Yet she kept it a secret from me for a long time that she wanted to act, although I’d never have tried to talk her out of it. Now I’ve seen her develop wonderfully as an actress into such a beautiful, charismatic figure, I see she has so much going for her.”

When her parents separated after seven years of marriage, Miranda went to live with her mother in Newcastle, and spent her time after school devising little plays with the children of other actors in their circle, such as Lucy, the daughter of John Bell of the Bell Shakespeare Company. At 16, in her HSC year, she took her first starring role in the movie Emma’s War, as the daughter of an alcoholic played by Lee Remick. She never looked back, attending the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) in Sydney, then winning role after role in film, television and on stage.

She has often been her own toughest critic, however. “I was looking at an old tape the other day of something I must have done 10 to 15 years ago, and all I could think was, ‘Thank goodness I went to NIDA after that!’” she says, laughing. “I had no idea what I was doing – and it showed. But I’ve never regretted any of my roles. Even if the work was bad, I might have met amazing people or been to an interesting place. You learn something from every single experience.”

After roles in so many Australian movies, including The Last Days of Chez Nous (1992), The Notradamus Kid (1993), True Love and Chaos (1997), The Well (1997) and In the Winter Dark (1998), in which she played opposite former beau Richard, she spread her wings overseas. She was John Cusack’s wife in the western The Jack Bull (1999), she did the thriller What Lies Beneath (2000) with Michelle Pfeiffer and Harrison Ford, there was Human Nature (2001) with Tim Robbins, Patricia Arquette and Rhys Ifans, and a diamond commercial kissing Brad Pitt.

In among them were a few more eccentric choices. She went to Nambia for the drama Kin (2000) and to Italy for The Three-legged Fox (2001). She didn’t realise the film was to be in Italian, since her script was in English. In the end, she learned a smattering of Italian, then worked on the film, amazed by the degree of chaos on a Naples film set. “We’d been talking about the film for two years, but it wasn’t until much later that I learned they’d translated it all for my benefit, and even I would be speaking in Italian.” She says.

The Human Nature role came up after she narrowly lost out to Cameron Diaz for a lead in Being John Malkovich, and there she became good friends with Rhys Ifans, the Welsh scene-stealer Spike in Notting Hill. Last year, he was cast as the lead in Danny Deckchair and asked the producers to consider Miranda for the part of his love interest. At first, she refused. She’d been working for two and a half years and desperately need some time out.

Eventually, however, she agreed, both because she’d enjoyed working with Rhys, and because she loved the story of Danny the dreamer, who escapes his humdrum life by floating off on a garden chair tied to helium balloons.

Miranda plays Glenda, a tough, country-town parking inspector, whose garden Danny crashes into. While staying with her, he manages to reinvent himself into the local hero, while bringing out a side in Glenda no one realised existed, as she is transformed into a bewitching woman.

Producer Andrew Mason says Miranda was perfect for the role. “I think you should cast as the female lead someone you could be in love with yourself,” he says. “Everyone ended this film in love with Miranda. And she’s got such a great laugh, the kind that makes you know there’s something amazing, wicked fun happening that you really want to be part of.”

The role is perhaps another unconventional move for a woman on the brink of international stardom, but it’s this kind of endlessly varied, unpredictable, restless career that Miranda has always craves. She doesn’t particularly like the limelight or the glamour of fame, preferring to chose unusual projects, a heady mix of film, TV and theatre, or parts that she feels sure will challenge her.

She has just returned from a three week trip to the US, where she looked at scripts, but didn’t like most of them. “I find it difficult to find stuff I like in the States, and I can’t do it if I’m not interested in it.” She explains. “But I don’t get so many offers from there. I don’t seem to have that hard edge that a lot of women’s roles there have. I’m not really into that whole star stuff, either. That’s a very strange world full of dietitians, and you have very little control over your own life. I want the kind of career where you work in different places, and do small things, then occasionally big films, then some theatre. That’s the kind of career I have, and I’m happy with it.”

Also somewhere in the mix is Miranda’s resolve not to do anything that would separate her and her new husband for too long. Planning a trip to London together, where they could both work for a few months, they have agreed only to accept work on their own terms when they return.

“Being in a partnership changes you,” Miranda says. “You realise it isn’t worth going away unless something’s really good. There’s no point in being apart just to earn more money or to travel. I only want to do something if we both feel it’s worthwhile, and it works within our marriage.”

Miranda smiles, “I love good work, but my life is very important as well.”