Tommy's Honour


08:25 am - 10:20 am, Today on MGM+ Marquee HDTV (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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A historical drama depicting the complex relationship between Scottish golf pioneer Old Tom Morris and his son, Young Tom Morris.

2017 English
Drama Romance Golf Adaptation

Cast & Crew
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Peter Mullan (Actor) .. Tom Morris
Jack Lowden (Actor) .. Tommy Morris
Ophelia Lovibond (Actor) .. Meg Drinnen
Sam Neill (Actor) .. Alexander Boothby
Peter Ferdinando (Actor) .. Major Molesworth
Max Deacon (Actor) .. David Strath
Therese Bradley (Actor) .. Nancy Morris
Ian Pirie (Actor) .. Willie Park
Kylie Hart (Actor) .. Lizzie Morris
Benjamin Wainwright (Actor) .. George Atwood Jnr
James Smillie (Actor) .. A.K.H. Boyd
Paul Reid (Actor) .. George Atwood Snr.
Seylan Mhairi Baxter (Actor) .. Fortune Teller
Christopher Craig (Actor) .. Durie
Andy Gray (Actor) .. Lang Dan
Colin MacDougall (Actor) .. Park Brothers Caddie
Brett Alan Hart (Actor) .. Jack Morris (Older)
Gareth Morrison (Actor) .. The Local
Paityn Hart (Actor) .. Rosie Drinnen
Jim Sweeney (Actor) .. Mr. Murray
Paul Tinto (Actor) .. James Hunter
Kenny Blyth (Actor) .. Doctor
Daniel Campbell (Actor) .. Telegram Boy
John Walker Gray (Actor) .. Mungo Park
Greg Powrie (Actor) .. Campbell

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Peter Mullan (Actor) .. Tom Morris
Born: November 02, 1959
Birthplace: Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
Trivia: Best known for his award-winning portrayal of a recovering alcoholic in Ken Loach's My Name Is Joe (1998), Scottish actor Peter Mullan has been appearing in films since 1990. He first worked with director Loach in 1991's Riff Raff, and he has appeared in a number of popular Scottish films, including Danny Boyle's Shallow Grave (1994) and Trainspotting (1996), and Mel Gibson's Braveheart (1995). In 1998, the same year that he won the Cannes Film Festival's Best Actor prize for My Name Is Joe, Mullan made his feature directorial and screenwriting debut with Orphans. The story of four siblings gathered in Glasgow for their mother's funeral, it earned fairly positive reviews and comparisons to Gillies MacKinnon's Small Faces (1995). The following year, Mullan starred opposite Saffron Burrows in Miss Julie, Mike Figgis' adaptation of August Strindberg's tale about the disastrous affair between a wealthy young woman and her servant. He then went on to act in prominent roles for Ordinary Decent Criminal (1999), The Claim (2000), and Session 9 (2001). In 2002, he returned to directing and screenwriting with the controversial film The Magdalene Sisters, which managed to both win the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and be condemned by the Vatican.
Jack Lowden (Actor) .. Tommy Morris
Born: February 06, 1990
Birthplace: Chelmsford, Essex, England
Trivia: His parents had to move to Essex for IVF treatment; both he and his brother were IVF babies. Enrolled in the Scottish Youth Theatre at the age of 10. While at high school he studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London during the summer holidays. Was Deputy Head Boy at high school. Made his television debut at the age of 18 in an Irn Bru advert. Won an Olivier Award and the Ian Charleson Award for his performance in Ghosts in 2013. Featured as one of The Hot 100 by the UK arts and entertainment magazine The List in November 2016. Won the British Academy Scotland Award for his role in the Scottish Highlands thriller Calibre in 2018. In February 2019, teamed up with Beta Cinema to form his own production company, Reiver Pictures, based in Edinburgh.
Ophelia Lovibond (Actor) .. Meg Drinnen
Born: February 19, 1986
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: At 12 years old, lied and said she was 14 so she could book her first professional job on The Wilsons. Attended the Young Blood Theater Group with Carey Mulligan. Based her west-coast American accent on American movies and soap operas, and practiced it before moving to Los Angeles. Did tongue-twisters to warm up for the vocally-demanding role of Pippi Pepenopolis in Mr. Popper's Penguins. Taped an audition with her mom for Elementary; was offered the role 24 hours later.
Sam Neill (Actor) .. Alexander Boothby
Born: September 14, 1947
Birthplace: Omagh, Northern Ireland
Trivia: One of the most famous film personalities to hail from the South Pacific, New Zealand-bred actor Sam Neill possesses the kind of reassuring handsomeness and soft-spoken strength that have made him an ideal leading man. Born Nigel Neill to a military family in Omagh, Northern Ireland, Neill relocated to New Zealand in 1953 at the age of six. There he picked up the nickname that would become his stage name, and attended both the University of Canterbury and the University of Victoria before beginning his acting career. Neill labored as a director/editor/screenwriter for the New Zealand National Film Unit for several years; he made his first movie in 1975 and scored his first significant film success four years later as the romantic lead opposite Judy Davis in director Gillian Armstrong's My Brilliant Career. Shortly thereafter, Neill was brought to England under the sponsorship of star James Mason (who undoubtedly recognized the marked similarity between his acting style and Neill's). The actor's subsequent movie work included two memorable collaborations with actress Meryl Streep and director Fred Schepisi: Plenty (1985) and A Cry in the Dark (1988). Neill's British TV credits were highlighted by his starring role in the unorthodox espionage drama Reilly: Ace of Spies (1983), for which he won the British television BAFTA Best Actor award. He also began working on American films during the '80s, including the 1981 Omen sequel The Final Conflict (in which he demonstrated a considerable breadth of range as Satan's son Damien) and the 1987 TV miniseries Amerika. Neill also kept busy with projects down under, with perhaps his most memorable film being Dead Calm (1989), a masterfully crafted thriller that starred the actor as Nicole Kidman's husband.Neill truly came to international prominence during the '90s (as evidenced by his guest spot as a cat burglar on an episode of The Simpsons). He experienced a bumper-crop year in 1993, portraying the raptor-fearing Dr. Alan Grant in Steven Spielberg's blockbuster Jurassic Park, before returning to New Zealand to portray Holly Hunter's taciturn, unexpectedly violent husband in The Piano (1993). He was also honored with the Order of the British Empire that same year. Neill continued to work on a wealth of diverse international projects throughout the rest of the decade, notably John Duigan's Sirens (1994), which cast him as a '30s bohemian artist; the Australian satire Children of the Revolution (1996), reuniting him with Judy Davis; Revengers' Comedies (1997), which cast him as a suicidal businessman; the acclaimed miniseries Merlin (1998), in which he played the titular wizard; Robert Redford's The Horse Whisperer (1998), as the husband of Kristin Scott Thomas (the two had previously co-starred in Revengers' Comedies); and Bicentennial Man (1999), which featured the actor as the head of a family who purchases an uncannily human robot played by Robin Williams.Though Neill was notably absent from the 1997 sequel The Lost World: Jurassic Park, the second sequel in the series, 2001's Jurassic Park III, found the stalwart actor once again fleeing ornery dinosaurs on a tropical island and living to tell the tale. A turn as Victor Komarovsky in the made-for-TV remake of Doctor Zhivago quickly followed, and over thecourse of the next decade Neill would alternate frequently between television (Triangle, Merlin's Apprentice) and film (Wimbledon, Dayberakers), while still managing to land the occasional meaty role in projects like The Tudors (2007) and Dean Spanley (2008). In 2011, Neill brought an impressive air of menace to the ecological thriller The Hunter with his turn as an outwardly benevolent Aussie with a dark secret, and the following year he returned to television as a federal agent on the trail of convicts who mysteriously vanished without a trace in Alcatraz. In addition to acting and managing a New Zealand winery, Neill directed an acclaimed 1995 documentary about the New Zealand film industry, Cinema of Unease: A Personal Journey by Sam Neill.
Peter Ferdinando (Actor) .. Major Molesworth
Birthplace: London
Trivia: Has worked extensively with his Cousin Gerard Johnson, starring in Tony (2009) and Hyena (2014). Has often collaborated with filmmaker Ben Wheatley featuring in A Field in England (2013), High-Rise (2015) and an episode of Doctor Who that Wheatley directed. Starred in Woody Harrelson's experimental film Lost In London in 2017.
Max Deacon (Actor) .. David Strath
Therese Bradley (Actor) .. Nancy Morris
Ian Pirie (Actor) .. Willie Park
Kylie Hart (Actor) .. Lizzie Morris
Benjamin Wainwright (Actor) .. George Atwood Jnr
James Smillie (Actor) .. A.K.H. Boyd
Paul Reid (Actor) .. George Atwood Snr.
Seylan Mhairi Baxter (Actor) .. Fortune Teller
Christopher Craig (Actor) .. Durie
Andy Gray (Actor) .. Lang Dan
Colin MacDougall (Actor) .. Park Brothers Caddie
Brett Alan Hart (Actor) .. Jack Morris (Older)
Gareth Morrison (Actor) .. The Local
Paityn Hart (Actor) .. Rosie Drinnen
Jim Sweeney (Actor) .. Mr. Murray
Born: August 08, 1956
Paul Tinto (Actor) .. James Hunter
Kenny Blyth (Actor) .. Doctor
Daniel Campbell (Actor) .. Telegram Boy
John Walker Gray (Actor) .. Mungo Park
Greg Powrie (Actor) .. Campbell

Before / After
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Rocky
10:20 am