TodayPK.video
Download Your Favorite Videos & Music From Youtube
VidMate
Free YouTube video & music downloader
4.9
star
1.68M reviews
100M+
Downloads
10+
Rated for 10+question
Download
VidMate
Free YouTube video & music downloader
Install
logo
VidMate
Free YouTube video & music downloader
Download

Shirley (2011)

GENRESBiography,Drama
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Ruth NeggaLesley SharpBabou CeesayVictoria Pugh
DIRECTOR
Colin Teague

SYNOPSICS

Shirley (2011) is a English movie. Colin Teague has directed this movie. Ruth Negga,Lesley Sharp,Babou Ceesay,Victoria Pugh are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2011. Shirley (2011) is considered one of the best Biography,Drama movie in India and around the world.

In 1938 mixed race baby Shirley Bassey, her mother and eight siblings are living in a poor area of Cardiff after her father is imprisoned for sexual offences. The teen-aged Shirley will help the family finances bringing her big, impassioned singing voice to local clubs and, in 1954, aged seventeen, she moves to London, impressing agent Mike Sullivan. To further her career however she must give up her illegitimate daughter Sharon to be raised as her own child by Shirley's sister Iris. After winning over the famously hostile Glasgow Empire audience Shirley has arrived. Impresario Jack Hylton stars her in the West End and she has hit records. She rides out gutter press interest in Sharon and, after a row with Mike, takes fledgling film producer Kenneth Hume as her agent and husband. Not only does he fail to further her career but he turns out to be a homosexual. Yet Shirley is a born survivor, weathering her divorce from Ken in 1965 and, decades later, still every inch a star, belting ...

Shirley (2011) Reviews

  • Great cast in a decent BBC drama

    TheLittleSongbird2011-10-06

    My point of interest with seeing Shirley was the subject itself, the great Shirley Bassey. This BBC drama is good, lifted by the cast, but considering how great a singer Bassey is and the cast itself part of me thought it could have been better. The flaws with Shirley aren't apparent all the time, but when they are there they're quite glaring. Most of the drama is well-paced, compelling and fascinatingly written, not to mention moving. However some moments drag a tad, are a little clichéd in some of the situations and characters(like the scene where Mike Sullivan hears a teenage Bassey for the first time) and suffer from moments of stilted writing. Shirley however is beautifully photographed and the attention to detail shows a lot of care and love. The soundtrack is wonderful, with the mix of Bassey's best tunes and intimate and expansive incidental music, but part of me wanted more of it. Colin Teague directs thoughtfully. The cast are the main draw, with Lesley Sharp in fine form as Bassey's mother and Charlie Creed-Miles as Sullivan faring best in support. Ruth Negga however is astonishing, the lip-synching is not quite perfect but better than expected, however not only does Negga do a fine job with Shirley Bassey's on-stage manner and persona, but she really shines in the quieter and more introspective moments too. The sad-eyed desolation when her daughter sings her Happy Birthday is proof of this. Overall, could've been better, but Negga, soundtrack and support cast lift it. 7/10 Bethany Cox

  • The one & only, Dame Shirley Bassey

    UNOhwen2011-10-03

    Ruth Negga stars in a tele-film from BBC2, about the life of the one, the ONLY, Dame Shirley Bassey. SHIRLEY follows in the standard pattern of bios of 'fabulous talent, from hardscrabble beginnings,' but, maybe because I love her music, but, also, because of a terrific cast (featuring Lesley Sharp - familiar to WHOVIANS as Sky Silvestry, in the terrific episode MIDNIGHT - as Bassey's mother). For those not familiar with Shirley, she's the singer of several James Bond title themes - GOLDFINGER, DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER, MOONRAKER. Dame Shirley's powerful voice, and glamorous image, belie a life that started in Wales, in the '30's, as a mixed-race child. Through sheer talent and drive, Dame Shirley became the toast of London, and then, internationally through a slew of hits from the 1960's up til today. I usually am not a fan of 'true life' bio-pics, but, this one is truly wonderful. Hopefully, it'll be shown here, in the States, soon. See it, and, listen to that voice! 

  • The Woman with the Midas touch

    Prismark102016-04-16

    When I was a child Shirley Bassey was a big draw as she had her own Saturday night show on BBC television. She was one of the few black performers to have their own prime time show. This drama tells a condensed version of Shirley's life at breakneck speed. Growing up as a mixed race child in poverty in Cardiff, her natural father was jailed and the family seem to move from one squat to another. However Shirley had a big voice which brought her attention to a showbiz manager who booked her to various theatres and also got a recording deal but by 16 years of age she had already become pregnant. However despite finding fame their are setbacks. Her first husband (who was also gay) cannot get her film or theatre roles such as Nancy in Oliver because of her colour. The drama is very much meat and potatoes. Ruth Negga looks fabulous as Shirley Bassey, Charlie Creed-Miles fares well as her manager but it just felt too straightforward, clichéd and humourless.

  • Take the Dog for a Walk

    larkinoz2011-10-04

    This is a pathetic review of an outstanding and talented personality who became part of British musical history. As a long time fan of Shirley Bassey and who later had the chance to meet her albeit briefly I was utterly disappointed with this effort. It's a boring, straight laced account of biographic detail that a school boy could have written. It's poorly acted and scripted. There's no humour even though Shirley was known for it. Worst of all, in a tale of some of the best songs ever written and sung by one of the best ever singers, there was hardly any music at all. They could at least have put in a couple of complete songs but no we just get a few lines here and here. On top of that the actress does not portray Shirley Bassey's mannerisms- there's no Bassey passion, no shake of the head, no twist of the mouth, no movement of the body. My advice is watch something else or take the dog for a walk.

  • Living the diva loca

    Lejink2011-10-05

    I'm no fan of divas and their, to borrow a phrase "tantrums and tiaras" lifestyles plus the music of Shirley Bassey means absolutely nothing to me, but this dramatisation of her early career and breakthrough caught my interest although I'll admit it struggled to hold it. Initially held back by stilted dialogue and clichéd situations, it doesn't improve much afterwards and before long the future same is talking about herself in the third person. We're meant to feel sorry for Bassey as she chases the big-time leaving her infant daughter in the care of her similarly-minded mother and her sister who improbable as it seems soon teach the little girl to call her mother "auntie", while Shirley brings home the bacon financially. Then there are the star's relationships with men which are fairly ill-starred too, taking in her cheapskate manager and homosexual first husband but the problem with the production is that it's all crammed into one hour, giving the characters outside Ruth Negga's Bassey little time to develop. In the title role Negga manages the Welsh accent well, boyo, but struggles to lip-synch the singing. I wouldn't have thought it difficult to act spoilt but I was reasonably convinced that I was watching the young Bassey The support acting was competent, nothing more in fact the whole production struggled to really engage the viewer and in trying to find a hook overplays the race card throughout. At the end I knew a few more facts about Bassey's background but next to nothing about her personal make-up and was rarely gripped by a story that I wondered needed to be told at all.

Hot Search