Art & Entertainment

Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren Praise Each Other As They Reunite On Screen

Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren are reuniting for the soon to release drama series '1923' after first appearing together on screen 36 years ago.

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Helen Mirren and Harrison Ford
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Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren are reuniting for the soon to release drama series '1923' after first appearing together on screen 36 years ago.

'1923' is the prequel to 'Yellowstone' and sees the actors reunite decades after Peter Weir's 1986 film 'The Mosquito Coast'. As Ford, 80, explained at the Hollywood Legion Theater Post 43 series premiere, his respect for Mirren, 77, hasn't wavered since then, reports 'People' magazine.

"I admire her work and her person (now), and I have all the same degree of admiration for her as I did then," Ford told multiple media outlets, including 'People'.

"She's wonderful, she's just a lovely person, and so it's been both a professional pleasure and a personal pleasure working with her again," he added.

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Back in 1986, Ford had already appeared in the original 'Star Wars' trilogy and had knocked out two 'Indiana Jones' films. Mirren, meanwhile, said she considered herself a "nobody" back then -- as it was a time two decades before she'd win an Academy Award for her performance in 'The Queen'.

"When we first worked together, he was a huge movie star and I was like nobody," she explained. "I was very intimidated, very intimidated."

She said: "But also I learned a lot from him because I hadn't done a lot. I'd done a lot of theatre at that point, I hadn't done a lot of movies. So I watched him, and he taught me a great deal about film acting that to this day (that) I'm still using."

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According to 'People', in '1923' the actors star as Jacob and Cara Dutton, a couple running a family farm in Montana while navigating the challenges of the early 20th century, including pandemics, a historic drought, the end of Prohibition and the Great Depression.

Ford told reporters that the formation of the project is what ultimately got him hooked on the role. "The writing and the ambition of the piece that's evident from the scope and scale of it, (drew me to the role)," he explained. "And the precision of his language and dialogue, and the character."

Mirren seconded Ford's thoughts, specifically commending series creator Taylor Sheridan on his writing and calling his work "extraordinary".

"To be a part of something that is so exciting within the American sort of entertainment world, but also to be a part of something that is investigating American history in this particular way (is great)," Mirren said.

She added: "You can't do it in two hours, you know, it's great to have that great sprawl, and I just thought earlier on, it's like a big Russian novel. It's like War and Peace, you know, that real sense of an enormous arc of history. And to be a character within that, it's very exciting."

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