Welcome to About Kelly Macdonald, a fansite dedicated to Kelly Macdonald. Ms. Macdonald is a unique actress with a number of subtle and delicate performances on her belt. Her roles include Trainspotting, Gosford Park, Intermission, The Girl in the Cafe and No Country for Old Men. We hope you enjoy your stay here at About Kelly and feel free to contribute and send in your comments.
Kelly Macdonald Filmography

Gosford Park
Character: Mary Maceachran
Year: 2001
Release Date: January 4, 2002 (US), February 1, 2002 (UK)
Directed By: Robert Altman
Screenwriter: Robert Altman, Bob Balaban
Genre: Crime, Drama, Mystery
MPAA Rating: R (for some language and brief sexuality)

Cast Highlights:
...Clive Owen
...Maggie Smith
...Michael Gambon
...Kristin Scott Thomas
...Jeremy Northam

Filming Locations:
Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Surrey, England, UK
Middlesex, England, UK
Hertfordshire, England, UK



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In GOSFORD PARK, Robert Altman explores the English class system and master-servant relations via his preferred modus operandi of multiple characters and intertwining storylines, which he achieved so brilliantly in NASHVILLE. Featuring an all-star British ensemble cast, the film recalls both THE RULES OF THE GAME and THE REMAINS OF THE DAY, with a midpoint shift to an Agatha Christie whodunit. In November 1932, a phalanx of moneyed guests arrives for a weekend shooting party at the estate of Sir William McCordle (Michael Gambon) and Lady Sylvia (Kristin Scott Thomas). Mary (Kelly Macdonald), a fresh-faced, naïve new maid accompanies the sniping Countess of Trentham (Maggie Smith), and is shown the ropes by the house's worldly head housemaid, Elsie (Emily Watson). While the masters engage in various financial and sexual intrigues upstairs, the world downstairs has its own curiosities--namely, the predatory valet to a Hollywood producer, Henry Denton (Ryan Phillippe), and the mysterious, cagey servant, Robert Parks (Clive Owen). Mary soon discovers that the image of servants living vicariously through their masters is a false one, and that the upstairs-downstairs worlds are often shockingly interwoven. With GOSFORD PARK, Altman delivers a fascinating, blackly comic look at the treacherous yet poignant gamesmanship between the classes.


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