Mirror Mirror


06:23 am - 08:09 am, Sunday, November 23 on HBO Comedy (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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In this take on the classic fairy tale, Prince Alcott falls in love with Snow White, which prompts the Evil Queen to cast her into exile. Snow White then allies herself with a gang of pint-sized thieves in order to win back the throne and her true love.

2012 English Stereo
Action/adventure Romance Fantasy Drama Magic Sci-fi Comedy Comedy-drama Family Other

Cast & Crew
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Julia Roberts (Actor) .. The Evil Queen
Armie Hammer (Actor) .. Prince Alcott
Nathan Lane (Actor) .. Brighton
Jordan Prentice (Actor) .. Napoleon
Mark Povinelli (Actor) .. Half Pint
Danny Woodburn (Actor) .. Grimm
Sebastian Saraceno (Actor) .. Wolf
Ronald Lee Clark (Actor) .. Chuckles
Martin Klebba (Actor) .. Butcher
Bonnie Bentley (Actor) .. Caroline (Poor Woman)
Kwasi Songui (Actor) .. Noble #2
Eric Davis (Actor) .. Noble #3
Kathleen Fee (Actor) .. Noble #4
Nadia Verrucci (Actor) .. Servant
Adam Butcher (Actor) .. Servant #2
Dawn Ford (Actor) .. Townswoman
Alex Ivanovici (Actor) .. Town Magistrate
Richard Jutras (Actor) .. Townsman
Melodie Simard (Actor) .. Child
Kimberly-Sue Murray (Actor) .. Villager
Andre Lanthier (Actor) .. Lord Waverly
Lisa Noto (Actor) .. Magical Cottage Queen
Nicholas Guest (Actor) .. Door Guard #2
Joe Gnoffo (Actor)
Mélodie Simard (Actor) .. Child

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Julia Roberts (Actor) .. The Evil Queen
Born: October 28, 1967
Birthplace: Smyrna, Georgia, United States
Trivia: Born October 28th, 1967, Georgia native Julia Roberts was raised in a fervently pro-theater environment. Her parents regularly hosted acting and writing workshops, and both of the Roberts children (Julia and her brother Eric) showed an interest in the performing arts at an early age. Ironically enough, Eric was the first to break into film; in 1978, one year after their father died of lung cancer at 47, Eric Roberts starred in director Frank Pierson's psychological drama King of the Gypsies. Though her older brother would go on to have a solid acting career, it was, of course, Julia Roberts who earned a spot among Hollywood's elite.After making her film debut in Blood Red -- which wouldn't be released until 1989, despite having been completed in 1986 -- and appearing in several late '80s television features, Roberts got her first real break in the 1988 made-for-cable drama Satisfaction. That role, consequently, led to her first significant supporting role -- a feisty pizza parlor waitress in 1989's Mystic Pizza with Annabeth Gish, Lili Taylor, and a then 19-year-old Matt Damon. While Mystic Pizza was not a star-making film for Roberts, it certainly helped earn her the credentials she needed to land the part of Shelby, an ill-fated would-be mother in Steel Magnolias. The 1989 tearjerker found her acting alongside Sally Field and Shirley MacLaine, and culminated in an Oscar nomination for Roberts. While the success of Steel Magnolias played no small part in launching Roberts' career, and undoubtedly secured her role in the mediocre Flatliners (1990) with former flame Kiefer Sutherland, it was director Garry Marshall's romantic comedy Pretty Woman with Richard Gere that served as her true breakthrough role. Roberts' part in Pretty Woman (a good-hearted prostitute who falls in love with a millionaire client) made the young actress a household name and cemented what would become a permanent spot in tabloid fodder. Roberts broke off her engagement with Sutherland in 1991, just three days before they were scheduled to be married, and surprised the American public in 1993, when she began her two-year marriage to country singer Lyle Lovett. Roberts' personal life kept her name in the spotlight despite a host of uneven performances throughout the early '90s (neither 1991's Dying Young or Sleeping With the Enemy garnered much acclaim), as did a reputed feud with Steven Spielberg during the filming of Hook (1991). Luckily, Roberts made decidedly less embarrassing headlines in 1993, when her role alongside future Oscar winner Denzel Washington in The Pelican Brief reaffirmed her status as a dramatic actress. Her career, however, took a turn back to the mediocre throughout the following year; both Prêt-à-Porter and I Love Trouble proved commercial flops, and Mary Reilly (1996) fizzled at the box office as well. The downward spiral reversed directions once again with 1996's Michael Collins and Conspiracy Theory with Mel Gibson, and led to several successful comic roles including Notting Hill with Hugh Grant, Runaway Bride, and most notably, My Best Friend's Wedding with Rupert Everett and a then virtually unknown Cameron Diaz. Roberts' biggest success didn't present itself until 2000, though, when she delivered an Oscar-winning performance playing the title role in Steven Soderbergh's Erin Brockovich. The film, based on the true story of Erin Brockovich, a single mother who, against all odds, won a heated battle against corporate environmental offenders, earned Roberts a staggering 20-million-dollar salary. Officially the highest paid actress in Hollywood, Roberts went on to star in 2001's America's Sweethearts with Billy Crystal, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and John Cusack, as well as The Mexican with Brad Pitt. While on the set of The Mexican, Roberts met cameraman Danny Moder, whom she would marry in 2001 almost immediately after ending a four-year relationship with fellow actor Benjamin Bratt. Indeed, 2001 was a banner year for Roberts; in addition to America's Sweethearts and The Mexican, Roberts starred in the crime caper Ocean's Eleven, in which she rejoined former co-stars Brad Pitt and Matt Damon, and acted for the first time with George Clooney and Don Cheadle. Julia Roberts worked with Soderbergh once again in 2002's Full Frontal, which, despite a solid cast including Mary McCormack and Catherine Keener, among others, did not even begin to fare as well as Erin Brockovich. Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002), which featured Roberts as a femme fatale alongside George Clooney, Sam Rockwell, and Drew Barrymore did much better, and preceded 2003's Mona Lisa Smile with young Hollywood's Julia Stiles, Kirsten Dunst, and Maggie Gyllenhaal. In 2004, Roberts signed on for the sequel to Ocean's Eleven -- the aptly titled Ocean's Twelve. A supporting performance in the animated 2006 feature The Ant Bully marked the glamorous Hollywood beauty's first foray into the world of animation, which she would continue for Christmas of 2006 with the role of everone's favorite selfless spider in Charlotte's Web. In the coming years, Roberts would reteam with Tom Hanks for Charlie Wilson's War in 2007, and then again for Larry Crowne in 2011. In the meantime, the A-lister would keep busy with a critically acclaimed performance in 2010's Eat, Pray, Love, in which she portrayed a divorcee on a journey of self discovery, and 2012's retelling of Snow White, Mirror, Mirror.
Armie Hammer (Actor) .. Prince Alcott
Born: August 28, 1986
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: The great-grandson of famous 20th century oil tycoon Armand Hammer, Armie Hammer Jr. seemed poised for movie stardom thanks to his poster-boy looks and his imposing, muscular, 6'5" frame. Hammer landed two of his first major roles at polar opposite ends of the dramatic spectrum: one playing the young Christian evangelical minister Billy Graham in actor-turned-director Robby Benson's chronicle of Graham's early life, Billy: The Early Years (2008), and another playing the son of Satan on the small screen fantasy adventure series Reaper. His huge breakthrough came in 2010 when David Fincher cast him as both the Winklevoss twin, the privileged duo who claim Mark Zuckerberg stole the idea for Facebook from them. He was next seen as Clyde Tolson in Clint Eastwood's biopic J. Edgar in 2011. The next year he appeared in Mirror Mirror, and was cast opposite Johnny Depp as the title character in The Lone Ranger.
Nathan Lane (Actor) .. Brighton
Born: February 03, 1956
Birthplace: Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Known for his outrageous, divinely comedic performances on stage and screen, Nathan Lane has led a career encompassing Broadway, television, and film. Born Joe Lane in Jersey City, New Jersey on February 3, 1956, Lane took his stage name from Nathan Detroit, the character he played to great acclaim in the 1992 Broadway version of Guys and Dolls.Lane made his film debut in 1987's Ironweed, and he spent the rest of the 1980s and early 1990s playing secondary roles in films like Joe Versus the Volcano (1990), Frankie and Johnny (1991), and Addams Family Values (1993). During this time, his stage career was thriving; in addition to his celebrated turn in Guys and Dolls (for which he won a Tony nomination, as well as Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards), he frequently collaborated with playwright Terrence McNally, who cast him in a number of his plays, including The Lisbon Traviata, in which Lane played an opera queen, and Love! Valour! Compassion!, in which he starred as Buzz, an HIV-positive musical aficionado who provides much of the play's comic relief and genuine anger. The actor won particular acclaim for his portrayal of the latter character, taking home Obie and Drama Desk Awards, as well as other honors, for his work.In 1994, the same year that he starred in the stage version of Love! Valour! Compassion! (his role was played in the film version by Jason Alexander), Lane gained fame of a different sort, lending his voice to Timon, a hyperactive meerkat in Disney's animated The Lion King. He reprised the role for the extremely successful movie's 1998 sequel. Two years after playing a meerkat, Lane finally became widely visible to screen audiences as Robin Williams' flamboyantly limp-wristed lover in The Birdcage, Mike Nichols' remake of La Cage aux Folles. The film helped to establish Lane--who was at the time starring on Broadway in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum--as a comic actor worthy of big-screen exposure, and in 1997 he was given his own vehicle to display his talents, Mouse Hunt. Unfortunately, the film was a relative disappointment, as was Encore! Encore!, a 1998 sitcom that cast the actor as a Pavorotti-like opera singer alongside Glenne Headly and Joan Plowright. However, Lane continued to work steadily, appearing both on stage and in film. In 1999, he could be seen in At First Sight and Get Bruce, a documentary about comic writer Bruce Vilanch. The same year, he could also be heard in Stuart Little, a live action/animated adaptation of E.B White's celebrated children's book.Over the coming years, Lane would appear in several films, including a new big screen adaptation of The Producers and the fairy tale Mirror Mirror.
Jordan Prentice (Actor) .. Napoleon
Born: January 30, 1973
Mark Povinelli (Actor) .. Half Pint
Born: August 09, 1971
Birthplace: Elyria, Ohio, United States
Trivia: A massively charismatic figure on screen despite a real life stature of just 3'9.5", Mark Povinelli studied at Miami University before beginning an on-screen acting career with roles on TV shows like Fraser, and movies like The Polar Express. Povinelli sometimes performed stunts, in films like Van Helsing and Employee of the Month, but largely stuck to acting, earning particular attention for the role of Walter in the 2011 period drama Water for Elephants. He followed that up with a major part in the Snow White-inspired family film Mirror Mirror.
Joey Gnoffo (Actor)
Danny Woodburn (Actor) .. Grimm
Born: July 26, 1964
Sebastian Saraceno (Actor) .. Wolf
Ronald Lee Clark (Actor) .. Chuckles
Martin Klebba (Actor) .. Butcher
Born: June 23, 1969
Birthplace: Troy, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Stands 4'1" and has a rare form of dwarfism known as acromicric dysplasia. High-school extracurricular activities included football and drama club. Post-high school, made his acting debut at Radio City Music Hall, where he continued to perform for 10 years. In addition to acting, has worked as a stuntman since the early '90s; credits include movies such as Evan Almighty and Van Helsing. Is close friends with Little People, Big World stars Matt and Amy Roloff and appeared on their show several times. Is an accomplished soccer player who competed in the 2009 World Dwarf games as a member of soccer team the Statesmen. Works with the Coalition for Dwarf Advocacy, a nonprofit foundation formed to assist and advocate for people with dwarfism.
Bonnie Bentley (Actor) .. Caroline (Poor Woman)
Kwasi Songui (Actor) .. Noble #2
Birthplace: Montréal, Québec, Canada
Eric Davis (Actor) .. Noble #3
Kathleen Fee (Actor) .. Noble #4
Nadia Verrucci (Actor) .. Servant
Adam Butcher (Actor) .. Servant #2
Born: October 20, 1988
Dawn Ford (Actor) .. Townswoman
Alex Ivanovici (Actor) .. Town Magistrate
Richard Jutras (Actor) .. Townsman
Born: April 21, 1958
Melodie Simard (Actor) .. Child
Kimberly-Sue Murray (Actor) .. Villager
Birthplace: Gaspé, Québec, Canada
Trivia: Is a graduate of the prestigious Canadian Film Centre, Actors Conservatory, having trained there from 2011 to 2012.Studied professional theatre in college.Made her film debut playing Monica in the 2010 crime drama The Perfect Teacher.Made her writing debut with the 2017 short drama/ thriller She Came Knocking which she co-wrote with director John Ainslie and also starred in and produced.Landed the role of Danika Dubov on the sci-fi horror drama series V-Wars which debuted in 2019.
Andre Lanthier (Actor) .. Lord Waverly
Lisa Noto (Actor) .. Magical Cottage Queen
William Calvert (Actor)
Nicholas Guest (Actor) .. Door Guard #2
Born: May 05, 1951
Trivia: Supporting actor Nicholas Guest first appeared onscreen in the '80s. He is the brother of actor Christopher Guest.
Joe Gnoffo (Actor)
Mélodie Simard (Actor) .. Child
Ellen Hillingsø (Actor)
Kerry Barden (Actor)
Paul Schnee (Actor)