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An Actor's Life and Backstage Strife During WWII
Media Release For immediate release June 18, 2021 An actor’s life and backstage strife during WWII INSPIRED by memories of his years working as a dresser for actor-manager Sir Donald Wolfit, Ronald Harwood’s evocative, perceptive and hilarious portrait of backstage life comes to Melville Theatre this July. Directed by Jacob Turner, The Dresser is set in England against the backdrop of World War II as a group of Shakespearean actors tour a seaside town and perform in a shabby provincial theatre. The actor-manager, known as “Sir”, struggles to cast his popular Shakespearean productions while the able-bodied men are away fighting. With his troupe beset with problems, he has become exhausted – and it’s up to his devoted dresser Norman, struggling with his own mortality, and stage manager Madge to hold things together. The Dresser scored playwright Ronald Harwood, also responsible for the screenplays Australia, Being Julia and Quartet, best play nominations at the 1982 Tony and Laurence Olivier Awards. He adapted it into a 1983 film, featuring Albert Finney and Tom Courtenay, and received five Academy Award nominations. Another adaptation, featuring Ian McKellen and Anthony Hopkins, made its debut in 2015. “The Dresser follows a performance and the backstage conversations of Sir, the last of the dying breed of English actor-managers, as he struggles through King Lear with the aid of his dresser,” Jacob said. “The action takes place in the main dressing room, wings, stage and backstage corridors of a provincial English theatre during an air raid. “At its heart, the show is a love letter to theatre and the people who sacrifice so much to make it possible.” Jacob believes The Dresser has a multitude of challenges for it to be successful. -
One-Word Movie Titles
One-Word Movie Titles This challenging crossword is for the true movie buff! We’ve gleaned 30 one- word movie titles from the Internet Movie Database’s list of top 250 movies of all time, as judged by the website’s users. Use the clues to find the name of each movie. Can you find the titles without going to the IMDb? 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 EclipseCrossword.com © 2010 word-game-world.com All Rights Reserved. Across 1. 1995, Mel Gibson & James Robinson 5. 1960, Anthony Perkins & Vera Miles 7. 2000, Russell Crowe & Joaquin Phoenix 8. 1996, Ewan McGregor & Ewen Bremner 9. 1996, William H. Macy & Steve Buscemi 14. 1984, F. Murray Abraham & Tom Hulce 15. 1946, Cary Grant & Ingrid Bergman 16. 1972, Laurence Olivier & Michael Caine 18. 1986, Keith David & Forest Whitaker 21. 1979, Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver 22. 1995, Robert De Niro & Sharon Stone 24. 1940, Laurence Olivier & Joan Fontaine 25. 1995, Al Pacino & Robert De Niro 27. 1927, Alfred Abel & Gustav Fröhlich 28. 1975, Roy Scheider & Robert Shaw 29. 2000, Jason Statham & Benicio Del Toro 30. 2000, Guy Pearce & Carrie-Anne Moss Down 2. 2009, Sam Worthington & Zoe Saldana 3. 2007, Patton Oswalt & Iam Holm (voices) 4. 1958, James Stuart & Kim Novak 6. 1974, Jack Nicholson & Faye Dunaway 10. 1982, Ben Kingsley & Candice Bergen 11. 1990, Robert De Niro & Ray Liotta 12. 1986, Sigourney Weaver & Carrie Henn 13. 1942, Humphrey Bogart & Ingrid Bergman 17. -
Laurence Olivier in Hamlet (1949)
1 Laurence Olivier in Hamlet (1949) In the late 1930s and early 1940s, when Samuel Goldwyn, MGM, and David Selznick were wooing him, Laurence Olivier chose not to become a movie star “like dear Cary.” After playing Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights (1939), Darcy in Pride and Prejudice (1940), and Maxim Dewinter in Rebecca (1940), he appeared in Hollywood pictures sparingly and tried to avoid a fixed persona. He nevertheless became the symbol of what midcentury America thought of as a distinguished actor, and was the most successful English theatrical type in the movies. He wasn’t romantically flamboyant (Orson Welles was closer to that), he wasn’t a naturalist like the students of the Method, he wasn’t a Brechtian, and he wasn’t the sort of movie actor who plays variations on a single character. He belonged instead to a school of disciplined, tastefully romantic verisimilitude, and within that school was a master. He was also the best-known Shakespearian in films. Olivier often said that his favorite movie role was the working-class comedian Archie Rice in The Entertainer (1960), but his performances in the Shakespeare films that he directed are more representative of his skills and more significant in film history. Based on canonical texts with a long performance history, they foreground his stylistic choices 2 and make his influences relatively easy to identify. His version of Hamlet (1949), for example, seems to derive pretty equally from the English romantics, Sigmund Freud, and William Wyler. These sources are not so eclectic as they might appear. Romantic-realist ideas of narrative shaped nearly all feature films of the period; Wyler had been the director of Wuthering Heights and at one point was scheduled to direct Olivier’s production of Henry V; and Olivier’s conceptions of character and performance are similar to the ones that shaped Hollywood in the 1940s, when Freud was in vogue. -
Mental Calisthenics
Mental Calisthenics (2) Patient’s Name: Date: Copyright © 2012 by Cognitive Solutions, P.A. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or 1 by any means without written permission of Cognitive Solutoons, P.A. Life Logic There are three switches downstairs. Each corresponds to one of the three light bulbs in the attic. You can turn the switches on and off and leave them in any position. How would you identify which switch corresponds to which light bulb, if you are only allowed one trip upstairs? Write your solution here: Your last good ping-pong ball fell down into a narrow metal pipe imbedded in concrete one foot deep. How can you get it out undamaged, if all the tools you have are your tennis paddle, your shoe-laces, and your plastic water bottle, which does not fit into the pipe? Write your solution here: Copyright © 2012 by Cognitive Solutions, P.A. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or 2 by any means without written permission of Cognitive Solutoons, P.A. Copy the Design Copyright © 2012 by Cognitive Solutions, P.A. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or 3 by any means without written permission of Cognitive Solutoons, P.A. Brain Basher During a recent police investigation, Chief Inspector Stone was interviewing five local villains to try and identify who stole Mrs. Archer’s cake from the mid-summers fair. Below is a summary of their statements: Arnold: it wasn’t Edward it was Brian Brian: it wasn’t Charlie it wasn’t Edward Charlie: it was Edward it wasn’t Arnold Derek: it was Charlie it was Brian Edward: it was Derek it wasn’t Arnold It was well known that each suspect told exactly one lie. -
Shakespeare, William Shakespeare
Shakespeare, William Shakespeare. Julius Caesar The Shakespeare Ralph Richardson, Anthony SRS Caedmon 3 VG/ Text Recording Society; Quayle, John Mills, Alan Bates, 230 Discs VG+ Howard Sackler, dir. Michael Gwynn Anthony And The Shakespeare Anthony Quayle, Pamela Brown, SRS Caedmon 3 VG+ Text Cleopatra Recording Society; Paul Daneman, Jack Gwillim 235 Discs Howard Sackler, dir. Great Scenes The Shakespeare Anthony Quayle, Pamela Brown, TC- Caedmon 1 VG/ Text from Recording Society; Paul Daneman, Jack Gwillim 1183 Disc VG+ Anthony And Howard Sackler, dir. Cleopatra Titus The Shakespeare Anthony Quayle, Maxine SRS Caedmon 3 VG+ Text Andronicus Recording Society; Audley, Michael Horden, Colin 227 Discs Howard Sackler, dir. Blakely, Charles Gray Pericles The Shakespeare Paul Scofield, Felix Aylmer, Judi SRS Caedmon 3 VG+ Text Recording Society; Dench, Miriam Karlin, Charles 237 Discs Howard Sackler, dir. Gray Cymbeline The Shakespeare Claire Bloom, Boris Karloff, SRS- Caedmon 3 VG+ Text Recording Society; Pamela Brown, John Fraser, M- Discs Howard Sackler, dir. Alan Dobie 236 The Comedy The Shakespeare Alec McCowen, Anna Massey, SRS Caedmon 2 VG+ Text Of Errors Recording Society; Harry H. Corbett, Finlay Currie 205- Discs Howard Sackler, dir. S Venus And The Shakespeare Claire Bloom, Max Adrian SRS Caedmon 2 VG+ Text Adonis and A Recording Society; 240 Discs Lover's Howard Sackler, dir. Complaint Troylus And The Shakespeare Diane Cilento, Jeremy Brett, SRS Caedmon 3 VG+ Text Cressida Recording Society; Cyril Cusack, Max Adrian 234 Discs Howard Sackler, dir. King Richard The Shakespeare John Gielgud, Keith Michell and SRS Caedmon 3 VG+ Text II Recording Society; Leo McKern 216 Discs Peter Wood, dir. -
“Revenge in Shakespeare's Plays”
“REVENGE IN SHAKESPEARE’S PLAYS” “OTHELLO” – LECTURE/CLASS WRITTEN: 1603-1604…. although some critics place the date somewhat earlier in 1601- 1602 mainly on the basis of some “echoes” of the play in the 1603 “bad” quarto of “Hamlet”. AGE: 39-40 Years Old (B.1564-D.1616) CHRONO: Four years after “Hamlet”; first in the consecutive series of tragedies followed by “King Lear”, “Macbeth” then “Antony and Cleopatra”. GENRE: “The Great Tragedies” SOURCES: An Italian tale in the collection “Gli Hecatommithi” (1565) of Giovanni Battista Giraldi (writing under the name Cinthio) from which Shakespeare also drew for the plot of “Measure for Measure”. John Pory’s 1600 translation of John Leo’s “A Geographical History of Africa”; Philemon Holland’s 1601 translation of Pliny’s “History of the World”; and Lewis Lewkenor’s 1599 “The Commonwealth and Government of Venice” mainly translated from a Latin text by Cardinal Contarini. STRUCTURE: “More a domestic tragedy than ‘Hamlet’, ‘Lear’ or ‘Macbeth’ concentrating on the destruction of Othello’s marriage and his murder of his wife rather than on affairs of state and the deaths of kings”. SUCCESS: The tragedy met with high success both at its initial Globe staging and well beyond mainly because of its exotic setting (Venice then Cypress), the “foregrounding of issues of race, gender and sexuality”, and the powerhouse performance of Richard Burbage, the most famous actor in Shakespeare’s company. HIGHLIGHT: Performed at the Banqueting House at Whitehall before King James I on 1 November 1604. AFTER: The play has been performed steadily since 1604; for a production in 1660 the actress Margaret Hughes as Desdemona “could have been the first professional actress on the English stage”. -
Press Release 12 January 2016
Press Release 12 January 2016 (For immediate release) SIDNEY POITIER TO BE HONOURED WITH BAFTA FELLOWSHIP London,12 January 2016: The British Academy of Film and Television Arts will honour Sir Sidney Poitier with the Fellowship at the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 14 February. Awarded annually, the Fellowship is the highest accolade bestowed by BAFTA upon an individual in recognition of an outstanding and exceptional contribution to film, television or games. Fellows previously honoured for their work in film include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Steven Spielberg, Sean Connery, Elizabeth Taylor, Stanley Kubrick, Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Olivier, Judi Dench, Vanessa Redgrave, Christopher Lee, Martin Scorsese, Alan Parker and Helen Mirren. Mike Leigh received the Fellowship at last year’s Film Awards. Sidney Poitier said: “I am extremely honored to have been chosen to receive the Fellowship and my deep appreciation to the British Academy for the recognition.” Amanda Berry OBE, Chief Executive of BAFTA, said: “I’m absolutely thrilled that Sidney Poitier is to become a Fellow of BAFTA. Sidney is a luminary of film whose outstanding talent in front of the camera, and important work in other fields, has made him one of the most important figures of his generation. His determination to pursue his dreams is an inspirational story for young people starting out in the industry today. By recognising Sidney with the Fellowship at the Film Awards on Sunday 14 February, BAFTA will be honouring one of cinema’s true greats.” Sir Sidney Poitier’s award-winning career features six BAFTA nominations, including one BAFTA win, and a British Academy Britannia Award for Lifetime Contribution to International Film. -
Greatest Year with 476 Films Released, and Many of Them Classics, 1939 Is Often Considered the Pinnacle of Hollywood Filmmaking
The Greatest Year With 476 films released, and many of them classics, 1939 is often considered the pinnacle of Hollywood filmmaking. To celebrate that year’s 75th anniversary, we look back at directors creating some of the high points—from Mounument Valley to Kansas. OVER THE RAINBOW: (opposite) Victor Fleming (holding Toto), Judy Garland and producer Mervyn LeRoy on The Wizard of Oz Munchkinland set on the MGM lot. Fleming was held in high regard by the munchkins because he never raised his voice to them; (above) Annie the elephant shakes a rope bridge as Cary Grant and Sam Jaffe try to cross in George Stevens’ Gunga Din. Filmed in Lone Pine, Calif., the bridge was just eight feet off the ground; a matte painting created the chasm. 54 dga quarterly photos: (Left) AMpAs; (Right) WARneR BRos./eveRett dga quarterly 55 ON THEIR OWN: George Cukor’s reputation as a “woman’s director” was promoted SWEPT AWAY: Victor Fleming (bottom center) directs the scene from Gone s A by MGM after he directed The Women with (left to right) Joan Fontaine, Norma p with the Wind in which Scarlett O’Hara (Vivien Leigh) ascends the staircase at Shearer, Mary Boland and Paulette Goddard. The studio made sure there was not a Twelve Oaks and Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) sees her for the first time. The set single male character in the film, including the extras and the animals. was built on stage 16 at Selznick International Studios in Culver City. ight) AM R M ection; (Botto LL o c ett R ve e eft) L M ection; (Botto LL o c BAL o k M/ g znick/M L e s s A p WAR TIME: William Dieterle (right) directing Juarez, starring Paul Muni (center) CROSS COUNTRY: Cecil B. -
PN Feb 19 for Pdf.Pdf
1 The spiky and jarring Demons’ Chorus in Edward Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius includes the words: ‘What’s a saint? One whose breath doth the air taint before his death!’ What is a Christian saint? We’ve not long recovered from Christmas which celebrates the feast of St Nicholas, Santa Claus in his modern American makeover, and this month sees St Valentine’s Day on the 14th. The legend of St Nicholas, a 4th century bishop of Myra in south west Turkey, has him giving three bags of gold to three girls for their marriage dowries to save them from prostitution, while St Valentine was a 3rd century bishop who suffered martyrdom. What linked him with lovers is obscure, but certainly birds were believed to pair on the 14th of February, which also marked the Roman feast of Lupercalia celebrating fertility, when youths ran around striking women with goat-skin thongs. The 1st of March marks the feast of St David, patron saint of Wales. Often how the legends of saints and martyrs developed is obscure, but such legends are very widespread and powerful. Among other things, they offer us a sense of identity; and strikingly, as in the great persecutions of Christians in the 3rd and 4th centuries, they often involve folk from very humble backgrounds. For example, young girls like the 3rd century North Africans Perpetua and her slave, Felicity, who showed remarkable courage facing the cruellest tortures. Violent state persecution certainly left its mark on early Christians; as an early Christian writer put it: ‘The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church.’ Unfortunately, Christians are still being martyred for their faith, with the Pope turning contemporary Christian martyrs like Archbishop Oscar Romero into saints. -
Cultural Analysis of Jonathan Demme's "The Silence of the Lambs"
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1996 Cultural analysis of Jonathan Demme's "The Silence of the Lambs" Arthur S. Almquist The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Almquist, Arthur S., "Cultural analysis of Jonathan Demme's "The Silence of the Lambs"" (1996). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 1952. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1952 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Maureen and Mike " - MANSFIELD LIBRARY ' - The University of MONTANA Pennission is granted by the author to reproduce tliis material in its entirety, provided that this material is used for scholarly purposes and is properly cited in published works and reports. ** Please check "Yes" or "No" and provide signature ** Yes, I grant permission No, I do not grant permission Author's Signature Date ^ Any copying for commercial purposes or financial gain may be undertaken only with tlie author's explicit consent. A CULTURAL ANALYSIS OF JONATHAN DEMME'S THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Arthur S. Almquist presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts The University of Montana 1996 Approved by: Chairperson Dean, Graduate School 5- Date UMI Number; EP35166 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. -
Silence of the Lambs Clear Oscar Favorite
The Harris Poll \ 7 For release: Sunday AM, March 29, 1992 1992 #w ISSN 0895-7983 SILENCE OF THE LAMBS CLEAR OSCAR FAVORITE by Humphrey Taylor "Silence of the Lambs" is clearly the favorite among this year's crop of Oscar nominations, according to this special Harris Poll conducted just prior to the awards ceremonies on March 30th. This movie was picked as best picture, and Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster were selected as best actor and best actress for their roles as the leads in Silence of the Lambs. The public was asked who should win the Oscar only from these three categories, and its choices are definitely reflective of the popularity of the movies nominated. "Silence of the Lambs was picked by 28 percent of the public, closely followed by "Beauty and the Beast" at 24 percent. These were the only two movies which were nominated for best picture that were also among the top fifteen box office draws in 1991. Rounding off the rest of the list of the public's preferred choices for best picture are l1JE'Ku1at 18 percent, "Prince of Tides1' picked by 9 percent, and "Bugsyl' chosen by 4 percent. Among the five actors nominated for best actor Anthony Hopkins wins 28 percent of the public's support. Nick Nolte for "Prince of Tides" comes in second with 17 percent and Robin Williams for "The Fisher King" receives 15 percent. Robert De Niro for his role in "Cape Fear1' and llBugsyll'sWarren Beatty earn 12 percent and 10 percent respectively. The selections for best actress were more one-sided than for any of the other categories that were asked about. -
Liner Notes for the Screenwriter William Goldman Was Addison
A Bridge Too Far , Richard Attenbor - But every penny of that 22 million dollar march music was often quite optimistic ough’s 1977 epic 22 million dollar film budget is on the screen, and thanks to and upbeat. And it was later on, when adapted from the 1974 book by Cor - the literate screenplay by Goldman, and things started to go wrong, that one felt nelius Ryan, tells the story of Operation the excellent performances by the large more of the irony of the loss of life and Market Garden, the failed Allied attempt cast, Attenborough created a com - various tragic elements about a battle to break through German lines and take pelling film that holds up beautifully all that did not succeed as had been several bridges at a time when the Ger - these years later. For such a huge and hoped. One of the final images left on mans were on the retreat. Joseph E. impressive production, A Bridge Too Far the screen after the retreat, capture or Levine financed the entire film by him - received no Academy Award nomina - death of the remaining Allied forces is self, selling off distribution rights as film - tions whatsoever (it was the year of of a small child marching along proudly ing continued – by the time the film was Annie Hall) , but did receive several with his toy rifle over his shoulder – to finished it was already four million dol - BAFTA nominations including Best Film the sounds of the once cheerful XXX lars into the black, a pretty amazing feat. and Best Director – it took home several Corps march.