Full Programme Announced for CORONET INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
by BWW
News Desk
- Oct 25, 2017
Artistic Director of Print Room at the Coronet Anda Winters has curated a month-long festival representing the theatre's diverse, multi-artform programme and made up almost entirely of UK premieres. Coronet International Festival runs over 35 days and spans theatre, art, circus, dance, poetry and installations from around the globe. Featuring artists from 12 countries, the festival presents a fusion of international art works, crossing borders and genres and defying expectations.
Art and Politics Will Collide in Rubicon's TAKING SIDES
by Julie Musbach
- Oct 13, 2017
Rubicon Theatre Company (RTC) opens the company's 2017-2018 20th Anniversary Season with a provocative and gripping drama based on the story of German conductor and composer Wilhelm Furtw ngler, who remained in Germany after Hitler's rise to power and was later accused of being a Nazi sympathizer.
Full Programme Announced for CORONET INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
by A.A. Cristi
- Sep 19, 2017
Artistic Director of Print Room at the Coronet Anda Winters has curated a month-long festival representing the theatre's diverse, multi-artform programme and made up almost entirely of UK premieres. Coronet International Festival runs over 35 days and spans theatre, art, circus, dance, poetry and installations from around the globe. Featuring artists from 12 countries, the festival presents a fusion of international art works, crossing borders and genres and defying expectations.
THE CHESS PLAYER Reimagines Classic Tale at Edinburgh Fringe
by BWW
News Desk
- Aug 2, 2017
A battle rages inside prisoner's mind as he struggles against insanity while held in solitary confinement in a Nazi jail. After stealing a book of chess matches, he divides his conscious self into two feuding chess masters.
THE CHESS PLAYER Reimagines Classic Tale at Edinburgh Fringe
by BWW News Desk
- Jul 27, 2017
A battle rages inside prisoner's mind as he struggles against insanity while held in solitary confinement in a Nazi jail. After stealing a book of chess matches, he divides his conscious self into two feuding chess masters.
The Jewish Museum and FSLC Announce NYJFF Special Events
by A.A. Cristi
- Dec 14, 2016
The Jewish Museum and the Film Society of Lincoln Center announce the special events lineup for the 26th annual New York Jewish Film Festival (NYJFF), January 11-24, 2017. Among the oldest and most influential Jewish film festivals worldwide, unique in New York City, and one of the longest running partnerships of two major New York cultural institutions, the NYJFF each year presents the finest narrative and documentary films from around the world that explore the diverse Jewish experience.
Bookworks Presents Shelf Awareness for Readers
by BWW News Desk
- Feb 25, 2015
Although red carpet interviewers never ask the question we really want answered (Who are you reading?), the Academy Awards do remind us of the important role books play in the film business. This year, five of the eight best picture Oscar nominees were based on books or were book-related. Birdmanturned out to be the big winner, but several bookish films garnered a share of the golden statue spoils. Movies (and books) honored included:
THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL Tops Specialty Box Office for 2014
by Robert Diamond
- Jan 10, 2015
Via Deadline.com, THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL nominated four 4 Golden Globes on Sunday is adding to its list of good news with word that the film topped the box office in 2014 for Specialty films. They report that 'The film outpaced second ranked St. Vincent by just over $16M. In all, the 2014 Specialty Top 10 amounted to over $277.6 million, about 10% greater than last year's $249.2M-plus Top 10 total, which included titles Instructions Not Included, Oscar-winner 12 Years A Slave and Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine. '
Bookworks Presents Today's Shelf Awareness for Readers
by BWW News Desk
- Mar 28, 2014
Wes Anderson has made no secret regarding author Stefan Zweig's influence on his film The Grand Budapest Hotel, noting The World of Yesterday could have been the film's working titleand that 'elements... were sort of stolen' from bothBeware of Pity and The Post-Office Girl. Since I love the movie, reading more Zweig seems to be the logical next step.
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