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Florrie Wilkinson

News

Florrie Wilkinson

Jamie and Claire Fraser actors react to Outlander cliffhanger: "How is this possible?"
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The season 7 finale of Outlander, "A Hundred Thousand Angels," ended with some shocking twists. Easily the biggest was that Faith, Jamie and Claire Fraser's daughter, may be alive, even though we saw Claire sing to what appeared to be Faith's tiny lifeless body all the way back in season 2.

To be specific, Claire sang the song “Oh I Do Like to Be Beside the Seaside.” In the finale, Claire heard her and Jamie's new ward Fanny (Florrie May Wilkinson) sing this same song, a song that wasn't written until years after Fanny was born. And Fanny's late mother was also named Faith. That's what got the wheels turning for Claire.

"It’s such an interesting cliffhanger because it just opens up this whole other world of questions, which leads us so brilliantly into the next season," Outlander star Caitriona Balfe (Claire) told The Hollywood Reporter. "I think for Claire,...
See full article at Winter Is Coming
  • 1/21/2025
  • by Dan Selcke
  • Winter Is Coming
Outlander Season 7 Ending's Major Twist Addressed By Sam Heughan & Caitriona Balfe
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This article contains Spoilers for Outlander season 7, episode 16, “A Hundred Thousand Angels”Outlander stars Sam Heughan and Caitríona Balfe react to that massive season 7 cliffhanger. For most of its runtime, the Outlander season 7 finale looked as though it would follow a roughly familiar template for the long-running historical drama. Claire (Balfe) is fighting her way back from another life-threatening situation, with Jamie (Heughan) by her side. But the episode's final scene is a true game-changer, departing from the Outlander novels to reveal that Claire and Jamie's daughter, Faith, actually lived and had children of her own.

In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Heughan and Balfe reacted to the twist involving Faith. Heughan talked about how the revelation stretches all the way back to Outlander season 2, teasing how the discovery could impact Jamie. Balfe, meanwhile, praised Florrie Wilkinson, who plays Fanny Pocock, and who is key to how the discovery unfolds.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/19/2025
  • by Abdullah Al-Ghamdi
  • ScreenRant
‘Outlander’ Star Sam Heughan on That Major Finale Cliffhanger as He Teases What’s Next for Season 8
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[Warning: The below contains Major spoilers for Outlander, Season 7 Episode 16, “A Hundred Thousand Angels.”] Outlander may have answered a few questions, but it also raised dozens more in its Season 7 finale, “A Hundred Thousand Angels.” For those who have yet to tune in, now is a good time to turn back, because we’re about to delve into one of the show’s biggest spoilers to date. The finale teased that Jamie (Sam Heughan) and Claire’s (Caitriona Balfe) first daughter, Faith, may have actually lived despite being stillborn in Season 2’s aptly titled installment, “Faith.” This episode hints at the possibility that rather than staying buried in France, as they once believed, Faith actually lived and the Pocock sisters, Jane (Silvia Presente) and Fanny (Florrie May Wilkinson), are her children. While this revelation, which is made in Season 7’s final moments isn’t fully confirmed, it’s one that certainly excites Heughan. Starz “It’s going...
See full article at TV Insider
  • 1/18/2025
  • TV Insider
Outlander Season 8: Jamie & Lord John Relationship Teased By Star Sam Heughan
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Warning: Spoilers ahead for Outlander season 7, episode 16!Outlander star Sam Heughan has teased the relationship between Jamie and Lord John Grey in season 8, revealing what's next for them in the final episodes. Outlander season 8 will begin off the back of a shocking season finale, which implied Jamie's (Heughan) firstborn daughter, who he believed was stillborn in season 2, might actually be Fanny's (Florrie May Wilkinson) mother. However, in the midst of these time travel reveals, there was a dramatic confrontation between him and Lord John (David Berry), falling out after the latter married Claire (Caitríona Balfe) when Jamie was believed dead.

Speaking with What to Watch, Heughan teased Jamie and Lord John's contentious relationship in Outlander season 8, following their season 7 confrontation. The actor explained how their complicated history together had imbued a friendship between them, even if Lord John's feelings are more romantic. However, he also said both are father figures...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/17/2025
  • by Nick Bythrow
  • ScreenRant
‘Inside Outlander’ Aftershow: Charles Vandervaart on William’s New Dynamic With Jamie & Final Season Hopes (Video)
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[Warning: The below and video above contain Major spoilers for Outlander, Season 7 Episode 16, “A Hundred Thousand Angels.”] Outlander‘s penultimate season went out with quite a bang in its final chapter, “A Hundred Thousand Angels,” which saw the Frasers following a collision course toward a mind-blowing family revelation, in which Jamie’s (Sam Heughan) biological son, William (Charles Vandervaart) played an integral role. We’re referring, of course, to the cliffhanger which hinted Jamie and Claire’s (Caitriona Balfe) first daughter, Faith, actually survived and was the mother of their new ward, Fanny Pocock (Florrie May Wilkinson), and her sister, Jane (Silvia Presente). As viewers will recall, in Season 2, Claire gave birth to a stillborn Faith after Jamie was caught dueling Black Jack Randall (Tobias Menzies). In this episode, as Claire was recovering from her high-risk surgery at the hands of Denzell Hunter (Joey Phillips), she was visited by Season 2’s Master Raymond (Dominique Pinon), the apothecary owner who mysteriously...
See full article at TV Insider
  • 1/17/2025
  • TV Insider
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‘Outlander’ Season 7 Episode 14 Recap: “Ye Dinna Get Used to It”
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David Berry in ‘Outlander’ season 7 episode 14 (Photo Credit: Starz)

Starz’s Outlander season seven episode 14 finally brings Lord John Grey back into the main story. Episode 14, written by author Diana Gabaldon, also finds Bree in danger and Claire meeting a key figure in American history.

“Ye Dinna Get Used to It” opens with a flashback to London 1775. Lord John Grey (David Berry) learns his brother, Harold “Hal” Grey (Sam Hoare), has gout and can’t travel to New York. John can but doesn’t want to, and he’s able to stop Hal from writing a commission. They have a bit of an argument over William, and John assures his brother that when the time comes, he’ll see to his commission. John believes it’s still possible for there to be a peaceful end to the American Revolution – if America apologizes.

Although Hal initially disagrees, he finally admits it...
See full article at Showbiz Junkies
  • 12/27/2024
  • by Rebecca Murray
  • Showbiz Junkies
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‘The Haunting of the Queen Mary’ DVD Review
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Stars: Nell Hudson, Wil Coban, Florrie Wilkinson, Alice Eve, Joel Fry, Lenny Rush, Sophia Dunn-Walker, Wesley Alfvin, Maddison Nixon | Written by Tom Vaughan | Directed by Gary Shore

Horrors on the high sea are a common enough theme, from Ghost Ship and Deathship to The Haunting of the Mary Celeste and Titanic 666 there are plenty of them. The most recent of these, The Haunting of the Queen Mary opens on Halloween Eve,1938 when the ship’s festivities are replaced with terror as an axe-wielding man hacks his way through its corridors.

The plot then circles back a few hours to show Gwen and David Ratch sneaking into an exclusive party in an attempt to get their daughter Jackie introduced to some Hollywood stars who they hope can help her become the next Shirley Temple.

In the present day, Anne and Patrick Calder along with their son Lukas visit the ship with...
See full article at Nerdly
  • 1/23/2024
  • by Jim Morazzini
  • Nerdly
Wil Coban
Haunting of the Queen Mary review – tap-dancing horror ride aboard the big ship
Wil Coban
With a gory plot that unfolds across two timelines, this feels like a rebranding exercise for the grand ocean liner, turning it into a horror-themed adventure experience

This horror feature takes place largely on the Rms Queen Mary, the grand ocean liner built in Glasgow’s Clydeside docks in the 1930s which for many years now has been permanently moored in the harbour at Long Beach, California. In order to take advantage of both the ship’s vintage decor as well as its touristy gift shops and scale model displays, the screenwriters have crafted a plot that unfolds across two timelines. One is set in 1938 when a grisly, entirely fictitious murder takes place, while the other happens in the present day as a family interested in history and the supernatural gets caught up in the ship’s haunted legacy. The crisscrossing between the two periods is executed gracefully thanks to some nimble rhymed editing,...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 10/4/2023
  • by Leslie Felperin
  • The Guardian - Film News
‘The Queen Mary’ VOD Review
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Stars: Nell Hudson, Wil Coban, Florrie Wilkinson, Alice Eve, Joel Fry, Lenny Rush, Sophia Dunn-Walker, Wesley Alfvin, Maddison Nixon | Written by Tom Vaughan | Directed by Gary Shore

Horrors on the high sea are a common enough theme, from Ghost Ship and Deathship to The Haunting of the Mary Celeste and Titanic 666 there are plenty of them. The most recent of these, The Queen Mary opens on Halloween Eve,1938 when the ship’s festivities are replaced with terror as an axe-wielding man hacks his way through its corridors.

The plot then circles back a few hours to show Gwen and David Ratch sneaking into an exclusive party in an attempt to get their daughter Jackie introduced to some Hollywood stars who they hope can help her become the next Shirley Temple.

In the present day, Anne and Patrick Calder along with their son Lukas visit the ship with the idea of...
See full article at Nerdly
  • 8/25/2023
  • by Jim Morazzini
  • Nerdly
‘Haunting of the Queen Mary’ Review – Gary Shore Chills the Bones with an Overstuffed Supernatural Voyage
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The retired Rms Queen Mary docked in Long Beach, California is considered one of the most haunted locations in the world — which only somewhat shines through in Gary Shore’s Haunting of the Queen Mary. Any wishes to relive Dark Castle Entertainment levels of production design in Ghost Ship won’t be fulfilled, but that said, Haunting of the Queen Mary is more successful than its brushed-under-the-rug release undersells. Shore and co-writer Tom Vaughan channel the Queen Mary’s grave history for a supernatural infestation that spans decades, complete with atmospheric haunts akin to what’s accomplished in remakes of Thir13en Ghosts or House on Haunted Hill. Proper spookiness prevails, even though the over two-hour length gunks up the film’s gears with subplots that slow momentum.

Alice Eve stars as Anne Calder, who pitches Queen Mary’s Captain Bittner (Dorian Lough) on a virtual 3D tour experience to resurrect the ship’s reputation.
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 8/24/2023
  • by Matt Donato
  • bloody-disgusting.com
Haunting of the Queen Mary Review
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Plot: Stories playing out in modern day and on Halloween night 1938 show how the haunting of the Queen Mary ocean liner has a devastating effect on two different families.

Review: The Rms Queen Mary is a ship with a fascinating history. It was built in the 1930s to provide weekly express service between England and the United States – and for more than a decade it held the Blue Riband for being the fastest passenger liner on the sea. During World War II, it became a troopship that carried Allied soldiers. When the war ended, it went back to carrying civilian passengers until it was retired in 1967 and docked in Long Beach, California. For more than fifty years, it has sat in Long Beach, a tourist attraction. As you would expect from something with such an incredible history, the ship is believed to be haunted. Sometimes the reasons given for this haunting are questionable,...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 8/18/2023
  • by Cody Hamman
  • JoBlo.com
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