Topic: Mackenzie Crook

Mackenzie Crook

Film and television actor Mackenzie Crook played Gareth Keenan on the British version of The Office and pirate thug Ragetti in the Pirates of the Caribbean film franchise. " He co-wrote comedy sketches for The Eleven O'Clock Show on Britain's Channel ...

Movie reviews: Three and Out

Jonathan Gershfield; starring MacKenzie Crook, Colm Meaney, Imelda Staunton, Gemma Arterton As an amiable comic character offering diverting, often amusing sidekick turns to Hollywood big boys, Mackenzie Crook has carved a niche as Britain's current exponent of the craft. Now, with ...
For both Ralf Little and Mackenzie Crook to appear in this production of a new work by an American not yet well-known in this country is a real coup for the Bush, a theatre with a capacity of just 80. Yet Annie ...

From high seas to The Bush for Mackenzie Crook

Mackenzie Crook was seen by millions in The Office and Pirates of the Caribbean but will be performing in front of a much smaller audience in his next role.. The 38-year-old star, pictured, whose stage credits include The Seagull and Jerusalem at ...

City of Ember is best left beneath Earth

Something weird has happened to Planet Earth: it's in pitch dark. Gil Kenan's fantasy has two doughty teenagers, one a pipework assistant, the other a messenger, trying to find a way out into a world where, one day, the sun ...

Drivers try to derail premiere

Film stars dodged angry Tube drivers at the premiere of a film about suicides on the Underground. Dozens of transport workers greeted the cast of Three and Out which stars Mackenzie Crook as a Tube driver seeking someone to jump under his ...

Biggest crime? It's dreadful

ASLEF want to ban it. Starring Mackenzie Crook as a Tube driver looking for a volunteer to jump under his train and commit suicide so that he can receive a pay-off and never work again, it's amateurish, sitcom fare.. Of course ...

How Mackenzie stole the show

Before last week's opening of The Seagull at the Royal Court, London was abuzz with anticipation at what she'd make of Chekhov's vain antiheroine, Arkadina. The next day, she found her limelight comprehensively stolen by the man playing her ...