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#Francis La Haye
legok9 · 2 months
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"Who's that girl" DWM 268 (1998)
So, who would have played the Doctor if she'd been a woman from the first? DWM rounds up the likely ladies …
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Hermione Baddeley 1963-66 Renowned for unsympathetic roles in both Brighton Rock and the dour 'kitchen sink'-styled Room at the Top, film veteran Baddeley made an enthralling Doctor - part dragon, part slightly dotty maiden aunt. Eternal juvenile Melvyn Hayes was 'unearthly' grandson Stephen Vivian Pickles 1966-69 Although much younger, and never a lead, the versatile Pickles had been a familiar TV face for 20 years (Harpers West One, etc) before being cast as Baddeley's successor. Her sprightly, elfin Doctor had a penchant for dressing-up, like a St Trinian's tomboy who never left school
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Liz Fraser 1970-74 A comic actress familiar from several Carry Ons, Fraser's initial trepidation at taking on an ostensibly serious role soon dissipated. Her bossy, big-sisterly show-off of a Doctor was best paired with dippy companion Joe Grant (later Playgirl pin-up Robin Askwith) Frances de la Tour 1974-81 Gangling, piercing-eyed Shakespearean actress de la Tour played a tweedy, louche, Bohemian Doctor part-based on Virginia Woolf. Caused a minor sensation when she married the young actor who played the second incarnation of Time Lord companion Roman — Peter Davison
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Jan Francis 1982-84 Despite rumours that the next Doctor might be played by a man (former New Avenger Gareth Hunt is hotly tipped), the youngest actress yet is cast. Fresh from middlebrow thirties drama The Good Companions, Francis made for a sporty Doctor in Lottie Dod-style tennis whites Lynda Bellingham 1984-86 Known to SF fans for her role as Barbara the Butcher in an episode of Jenna's 7, Bellingham's controversial Doctor was a loud, hectoring grand-dame of the theatre. Unceremoniously 'regenerated' following the Doctor's on- (and off-) screen inquisition in the epic Trial of a Time Lady
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Pauline Melville 1987-89 Virtually unknown fringe cabaret and cult comedy artiste is surprise choice for 'back to basics' Seventh Doctor. Fan fears that series will become showcase for childish high-jinks up-ended when Melville stories adopt a sombre, down-beat mood, performed with conviction and gravitas Miranda Richardson 1996 The eldest in a successful line of acting siblings, a favourite of BBC producers since high-profile lead debut in revisionist biographical drama of notorious 20th century 'villain', makes a bid for American network stardom via lavish new big-haired version of Doctor Who. Star Trek actor Alexander Siddig plays love interest Dr Brian
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ONE FROM THE HEART: REPRISE (1982 - 2023)
Starring Frederic Forrest, Teri Garr, Raul Julia, Nastassja Kinski, Lainie Kazan, Harry Dean Stanton, Allen Garfield, Jeff Hamlin, Italia Coppola, Carmine Coppola, Luana Anders, Judith Burnett, Ty Crowley, Michael David Eilert, Miranda Garrison, Ken Grant, Sandra Gray, Doctor Hayes, Michelle Johnston, Douglas Brian Martin, Rebecca De Mornay and Tom Waits.
Screenplay by Armyan Bernstein & Francis Ford Coppola.
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola.
Distributed by Lionsgate. Reprise cut: 93 minutes (Original cut: 102 minutes). Rated R.
It makes a certain amount of sense that now, as legendary director Francis Ford Coppola is out there hitting the bricks to find a distributor to release his self-financed opus Megalopolis, that he would revisit One From the Heart. After all, 42 years ago, this film was the last time that he put all of his chips on the table, metaphorically, for a labor of love.
At the time, Coppola was flying high. His four previous films (The Godfather, The Conversation, The Godfather Part II and Apocalypse Now) were acknowledged to be classics. In the same timeframe, he made a small fortune by producing his friend George Lucas’ breakout film American Graffiti, another acclaimed, beloved and popular film.
After the fairly serious subjects he had taken on in his recent films – and particularly after the legendarily difficult shoot for Apocalypse Now – Coppola was looking to do something a little lighter. Specifically, he wanted to do an old-fashioned musical, a romantic tale full of song and dance and stunning visuals. In the original 1982 trailer for the film, it was called “a new kind of old-fashioned romance.”
In fact, Coppola was so sold on the script, which he wrote together with Armyan Bernstein from an original story idea by Bernstein, that he made it the first (and it turns out last) film to be self-financed by his new independent studio, Zoetrope Pictures. (Most of the money, if not all, was actually Coppola’s or gotten through personal loans.)
The story was about a working-class couple (Teri Garr from Tootsie and Frederic Forrest from The Rose) in Las Vegas who had been together for a few years and hit the point where they were nearly constantly fighting. Both of them get a chance for a wild, romantic adventure when they meet a pair of younger, sexy, mysterious strangers. These strangers were a Latin piano bar singer (played by a young, then-mostly unknown Raul Julia, who had made a name on stage but had done little film work at the time) and a German circus acrobat (played by Nastassja Kinski, who was extremely hot at the time after her hit films Tess and Cat People.)
One decision that Coppola made up front was that he wanted to recreate the glitter and bustle of the Vegas strip on soundstages. An argument could be made about whether it would have just been easier and less expensive to have filmed it on location in Las Vegas rather than create the extremely elaborate sets on soundstages. In fact, that argument was made at the time, by many people. However, looking at the finished product you have to admit that Coppola’s fever dream of the Vegas strip is spectacularly evocative, a wonderland of neon and blinking lights, kitschy sights and constant motion. It still looks amazingly fresh all these years later.
Coppola ended up losing his shirt on his One From the Heart gamble. More to the point, he ended up losing his dream independent studio, Zoetrope Pictures, which was bankrupted by the losses from the film. One From the Heart became a legendary flop, cited in the company of films like Heaven’s Gate, Caligula and Ishtar. In fact, at the time, Coppola insisted he’d be a fool to put his own money behind a movie again, a rule he had followed until Megalopolis.
Coppola has long insisted – mostly with cause – that One From the Heart got a bum rap when it was released. It has been given rerelease periodically over the years – in 2003 and again earlier this year in a nine-minute tighter director’s cut, which Is now coming out on video after a short theatrical run. (The video release contains both the new director’s cut as well as the original 1982 version.)
Watching it again with over 40 years of hindsight, it is certainly a flawed film, however it is also rather spectacular visually and aurally and not nearly as bad as its reputation suggests. It has life and energy and a truly wonderful (and mostly forgotten) musical soundtrack by Tom Waits. (Waits also has a brief cameo as a street musician playing the trumpet on the strip.)
The songs in One From the Heart – as performed by Waits with some surprisingly bluesy turns by country singer Crystal Gayle – work as something of a Greek chorus, commenting on and leading forward the action onscreen. The soundtrack was made at a crossroads time for the singer, as he was moving from his early jazz-soaked balladry of his earliest albums to the more experimental impulses that he would soon debut with his next album Swordfishtrombones. In fact, Waits met his future wife and musical collaborator Kathleen Brennan on the set of the film.
While the One From the Heart soundtrack is one of the few pieces of Waits’ discography that has often been out of print and given little attention, there is some truly stunning music here. This includes the gorgeous jazz lament “This One’s From the Heart,” the mournfully bitter argument song “Picking Up After You,” and the sweetly nostalgic “Broken Bicycles” and “Old Boyfriends.” There are also some hints towards Waits' later musical directions, like the sinister atonality of “You Can’t Unring a Bell” and the instrumental “Used Carlotta,” which relied on such found sounds as car horns and engines revving to accentuate the tune.
One From the Heart is worth watching for the music alone.
Luckily, there are more reasons to watch. As stated before, the visual style of the movie is just stunning. The acting was pretty spot on, too. Beyond the four terrific leads mentioned above, Lainie Kazan and Harry Dean Stanton (with one of the worst perms ever) always brighten up their scenes when they appear as the couple’s best friends.
One problem with One From the Heart is the dialogue, which is often kind of clunky and overwrought. The other major issue an audience is likely to have is that the couple at the heart of the story is just not all that easy to root for. Although Forrest and particularly Garr do all they can to make the characters relatable, we never really see what they see in each other. They spend so much time fighting that when they eventually have to decide between staying together or whether they should go off with their new fantasy lovers, the audience can’t help but wonder why they’d even want to continue their relationship. Wouldn’t they be better off taking a chance on the shiny new love, even when those lovers turned out to not be exactly as perfect as they originally seemed?
Of course, not exactly what it originally seemed can also describe the film itself. Despite its dicey reputation, there is a lot to love in One From the Heart. It’s not a classic, but it is a lot better than history has suggested.
Jay S. Jacobs
Copyright ©2024 PopEntertainment.com. All rights reserved. Posted: May 15, 2024.
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alexlacquemanne · 1 year
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Janvier MMXXIII
Films
Airport (1970) de George Seaton avec Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin, Jean Seberg, Jacqueline Bisset, George Kennedy, Helen Hayes et Van Heflin
L'Homme qui murmurait à l'oreille des chevaux (The Horse Whisperer) (1998) de Robert Redford avec Scarlett Johansson, Robert Redford, Kristin Scott Thomas, Sam Neill et Dianne Wiest
Boulevard du crépuscule (Sunset Boulevard) de Billy Wilder avec William Holden, Gloria Swanson, Erich von Stroheim, Nancy Olson, Fred Clark et Lloyd Gough
Écrit sur du vent (Written on the Wind) (1956) de Douglas Sirk avec Rock Hudson, Lauren Bacall, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone, Robert Keith et Grant Williams
Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949) de Busby Berkeley avec Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Esther Williams, Betty Garrett et Edward Arnold
Les Tontons flingueurs (1963) de Georges Lautner avec Lino Ventura, Bernard Blier, Jean Lefebvre, Francis Blanche, Venantino Venantini, Robert Dalban, Sabine Sinjen et Claude Rich
Un air de famille (1996) de Cédric Klapisch avec Jean-Pierre Bacri, Wladimir Yordanoff, Catherine Frot, Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Claire Maurier et Agnès Jaoui
Le Rapace (1968) de José Giovanni avec Lino Ventura, Rosa Furman, Xavier Marc, Aurora Clavel, Augusto Benedico et Marco Antonio Arzate
Aimez-vous Brahms… (Goodbye Again) (1961) d'Anatole Litvak avec Ingrid Bergman, Anthony Perkins, Yves Montand, Jessie Royce Landis, Pierre Dux, Jackie Lane et Michèle Mercier
Par-dessus les moulins (La bella mugnaia) (1955) de Mario Camerini avec Vittorio De Sica, Sophia Loren, Marcello Mastroianni, Paolo Stoppa et Yvonne Sanson
Y a-t-il enfin un pilote dans l'avion ? (Airplane II: The Sequel) (1983) de Ken Finkleman avec Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Lloyd Bridges, Chad Everett, William Shatner, Sonny Bono et Chuck Connors
Pouic-Pouic (1963) de Jean Girault avec Mireille Darc, Louis de Funès, Roger Dumas, Jacqueline Maillan, Christian Marin, Philippe Nicaud, Guy Tréjan et Daniel Ceccaldi
Papy fait de la résistance (1983) de Jean-Marie Poiré avec Christian Clavier, Michel Galabru, Roland Giraud, Gérard Jugnot, Martin Lamotte, Dominique Lavanant, Jacqueline Maillan, Jacques Villeret, Julien Guiomar et Jacques François
Votez McKay (The Candidate) (1972) de Michael Ritchie avec Robert Redford, Peter Boyle, Don Porter, Allen Garfield, Karen Carlson et Michael Lerner
American Graffiti (1973) de George Lucas avec Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Paul Le Mat, Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark, Mackenzie Phillips, Cindy Williams, Wolfman Jack, Bo Hopkins et Harrison Ford
Duel (1972) de Steven Spielberg avec Dennis Weaver, Jacqueline Scott, Eddie Firestone, Lou Frizzell, Gene Dynarski, Lucille Benson et Tim Herbert
Le jour se lève (1939) de Marcel Carné avec Jean Gabin, Jules Berry, Jacqueline Laurent, Arletty, Arthur Devère, Jacques Baumer, Mady Berry et Bernard Blier
Le Grand Alibi (Stage Fright) (1950) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Jane Wyman, Marlène Dietrich, Michael Wilding, Richard Todd, Alastair Sim et Sybil Thorndike
Capitaine sans peur (Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N.) (1951) de Raoul Walsh avec Gregory Peck, Virginia Mayo, Robert Beatty, James Robertson Justice, Denis O'Dea, Moultrie Kelsall et Stanley Baker
Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (2016) d'Edward Zwick avec Tom Cruise, Cobie Smulders, Danika Yarosh, Jessica Stroup, Aldis Hodge et Patrick Heusinger
Confidences sur l'oreiller (Pillow Talk) (1959) de Michael Gordon avec Rock Hudson, Doris Day, Tony Randall, Thelma Ritter, Nick Adams et Julia Meade
Fanfan la Tulipe (1952) de Christian-Jaque avec Gérard Philipe, Gina Lollobrigida, Noël Roquevert, Olivier Hussenot, Marcel Herrand, Geneviève Page et Sylvie Pelayo
Les Sentiments (2003) de Noémie Lvovsky avec Nathalie Baye, Jean-Pierre Bacri, Isabelle Carré, Melvil Poupaud, Agathe Bonitzer : Sonia et Virgile Grünberg
Moby Dick (1956) de John Huston avec Gregory Peck, Richard Basehart, Leo Genn, Orson Welles, Harry Andrews et James Robertson Justice
Tueurs de dames (The Ladykillers) (1955) de Alexander Mackendrick avec Katie Johnson, Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker, Herbert Lom, Peter Sellers et Danny Green
Séries
Kaamelott Livre IV, I
Tous les matins du monde : 1re partie - Tous les matins du monde : 2e partie - Raison et Sentiments - Les Tartes aux fraises - Le Dédale - Les Pisteurs - Le Traître - La Faute : 1re partie - La Faute : 2e partie - L’Ascension du Lion - Enluminures - Les nouveaux frères - La jupe de Calogrenant - La dent de requin
Friends Saison 3, 4, 5
Celui qui était laissé pour compte - Celui qui s'auto-hypnotisait - Celui qui avait un tee-shirt trop petit - Celui qui courait deux lièvres - Celui qui avait un poussin - Celui qui s'énervait - Celui qui avait un truc dans le dos - Celui qui voulait être ultime champion - Celui qui allait à la plage - Celui qui soignait les piqûres de méduses - Celui qui ne voyait qu'un chat - Celui qui avait des menottes - Celui qui apprenait à danser - Celui qui avait une nouvelle copine - Celui qui fréquentait une souillon - Celui qui poussait le bouchon - Celui qui était dans la caisse - Celui qui savait faire la fête - Celui qui draguait au large - Celui qui posait une question embarrassante - Celui qui gagnait les paris - Celui qui se gourait du tout au tout - Celui qui n'avait pas le moral - Celui qui jouait au rugby - Celui qui participait à une fête bidon - Celui qui avait la chaîne porno - Celui qui cherche un prénom - Celui qui faisait de grands projets - Celui qui va se marier - Celui qui envoie l'invitation - Celui qui était le pire témoin du monde - Celui qui se marie : première partie - Celui qui se marie : deuxième partie - Celui qui avait dit Rachel
Inspecteur Barnaby Saison 1, 2, 3
Meurtres à Badger's Drift - Écrit dans le sang - Mort d'un pantin - Fidèle jusqu'à la mort - Le Masque de la mort - L'Ombre de la mort - Le Bois de l'étrangleur - Le Terrain de la mort - Et le sang coulera - Mort d'un vagabond - Angoisse dans la nuit - Le Jour du jugement - Le Mystère de la tombe
Coffre à catch
#96 : Bonne année + Kelly Kelly + LA SURPRISE ! - #97 : L'enclumette à la ECW !! - #98 : Kofi Kingston est-t-il invincible? - #99 : Avec le Big Show, c'est Mieux! - #100 : Avec Sturry, la ECW reste forte !
Columbo Saison 3
En toute amitié
Affaires Sensibles
Le bal tragique de Saint-Laurent-du-Pont - "Soleil Vert" : un mirage écologique à Hollywood - Le calvaire de Scorsese - L'aventure Canal Plus - Les dents de la mer - Redoine Faïd : le braqueur aux multiples visages - 4 août 1962, chute et mort de la femme éternelle - Los Angeles, les émeutes de 1992 : chronique d’un drame annoncé - O.J. Simpson, une histoire américaine - 17 avril 1961 : La baie des cochons - Lockerbie, 1988. La mort tombe du ciel
Doctor Who
Le Pouvoir du Docteur
L'Agence tous risques Saison 1
Les gladiateurs - Enlèvement à Las Vegas - Bagarre à Bad Rock - Racket - Bataille rangée - Et c'est reparti - Pour le meilleur et pour le pire
Le Voyageur Saison 2
Le roi nu - Au bout de la nuit
Spectacles
Concert du Nouvel An en direct du Musikverein, à Vienne (2023)
Le Mari, la Femme et la Mort (1970) d'André Roussin avec Bernard Blier, Jacqueline Gauthier, Denise Grey, Claude Nicot et Harry-Max
Livres
Le seigneur des anneaux Tome 1 : La communauté de l'anneau de J.R.R. Tolkien
Détective Conan : Tome 4 de Gôshô Aoyama
Watchmen : Tome 1 d'Alan Moore et Dave Gibbons
Les aventures de Tintin : Tome 18 : L'Affaire Tournesol d'Hergé
Des dragées sans baptême de Frederic Dard
Kaamelott : Tome 10 : Karadoc et l'Icosaèdre d'Alexandre Astier, Steven Dupré et Roberto Burgazzoli
Goldboy N°11 : Aventure en Amazonie
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Tu dors Nicole (You’re Sleeping Nicole)
2014. Comedy Drama
By Stéphane Lafleur
Starring: Julianne Côté, Catherine St-Laurent, Marc-André Grondin, Fanny Mallette, Francis La Haye, Simon Larouche, Claudia-Émilie Beaupré, Juliette Gosselin, Claude Despins...
Country: Canada
Language: French
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L’Exhibition
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actorsinunderwear · 3 years
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Francis La Haye in You're Sleeping Nicole (2014)
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The National Garden should be composed of statues, including statues of Ansel Adams, John Adams, Samuel Adams, Muhammad Ali, Luis Walter Alvarez, Susan B. Anthony, Hannah Arendt, Louis Armstrong, Neil Armstrong, Crispus Attucks, John James Audubon, Lauren Bacall, Clara Barton, Todd Beamer, Alexander Graham Bell, Roy Benavidez, Ingrid Bergman, Irving Berlin, Humphrey Bogart, Daniel Boone, Norman Borlaug, William Bradford, Herb Brooks, Kobe Bryant, William F. Buckley, Jr., Sitting Bull, Frank Capra, Andrew Carnegie, Charles Carroll, John Carroll, George Washington Carver, Johnny Cash, Joshua Chamberlain, Whittaker Chambers, Johnny “Appleseed” Chapman, Ray Charles, Julia Child, Gordon Chung-Hoon, William Clark, Henry Clay, Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), Roberto Clemente, Grover Cleveland, Red Cloud, William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody, Nat King Cole, Samuel Colt, Christopher Columbus, Calvin Coolidge, James Fenimore Cooper, Davy Crockett, Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., Miles Davis, Dorothy Day, Joseph H. De Castro, Emily Dickinson, Walt Disney, William “Wild Bill” Donovan, Jimmy Doolittle, Desmond Doss, Frederick Douglass, Herbert Henry Dow, Katharine Drexel, Peter Drucker, Amelia Earhart, Thomas Edison, Jonathan Edwards, Albert Einstein, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Duke Ellington, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Medgar Evers, David Farragut, the Marquis de La Fayette, Mary Fields, Henry Ford, George Fox, Aretha Franklin, Benjamin Franklin, Milton Friedman, Robert Frost, Gabby Gabreski, Bernardo de Gálvez, Lou Gehrig, Theodor Seuss Geisel, Cass Gilbert, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, John Glenn, Barry Goldwater, Samuel Gompers, Alexander Goode, Carl Gorman, Billy Graham, Ulysses S. Grant, Nellie Gray, Nathanael Greene, Woody Guthrie, Nathan Hale, William Frederick “Bull” Halsey, Jr., Alexander Hamilton, Ira Hayes, Hans Christian Heg, Ernest Hemingway, Patrick Henry, Charlton Heston, Alfred Hitchcock, Billie Holiday, Bob Hope, Johns Hopkins, Grace Hopper, Sam Houston, Whitney Houston, Julia Ward Howe, Edwin Hubble, Daniel Inouye, Andrew Jackson, Robert H. Jackson, Mary Jackson, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson, Steve Jobs, Katherine Johnson, Barbara Jordan, Chief Joseph, Elia Kazan, Helen Keller, John F. Kennedy, Francis Scott Key, Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King, Jr., Russell Kirk, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Henry Knox, Tadeusz Kościuszko, Harper Lee, Pierre Charles L’Enfant, Meriwether Lewis, Abraham Lincoln, Vince Lombardi, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Clare Boothe Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Dolley Madison, James Madison, George Marshall, Thurgood Marshall, William Mayo, Christa McAuliffe, William McKinley, Louise McManus, Herman Melville, Thomas Merton, George P. Mitchell, Maria Mitchell, William “Billy” Mitchell, Samuel Morse, Lucretia Mott, John Muir, Audie Murphy, Edward Murrow, John Neumann, Annie Oakley, Jesse Owens, Rosa Parks, George S. Patton, Jr., Charles Willson Peale, William Penn, Oliver Hazard Perry, John J. Pershing, Edgar Allan Poe, Clark Poling, John Russell Pope, Elvis Presley, Jeannette Rankin, Ronald Reagan, Walter Reed, William Rehnquist, Paul Revere, Henry Hobson Richardson, Hyman Rickover, Sally Ride, Matthew Ridgway, Jackie Robinson, Norman Rockwell, Caesar Rodney, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Betsy Ross, Babe Ruth, Sacagawea, Jonas Salk, John Singer Sargent, Antonin Scalia, Norman Schwarzkopf, Junípero Serra, Elizabeth Ann Seton, Robert Gould Shaw, Fulton Sheen, Alan Shepard, Frank Sinatra, Margaret Chase Smith, Bessie Smith, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Jimmy Stewart, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Gilbert Stuart, Anne Sullivan, William Howard Taft, Maria Tallchief, Maxwell Taylor, Tecumseh, Kateri Tekakwitha, Shirley Temple, Nikola Tesla, Jefferson Thomas, Henry David Thoreau, Jim Thorpe, Augustus Tolton, Alex Trebek, Harry S. Truman, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Dorothy Vaughan, C. T. Vivian, John von Neumann, Thomas Ustick Walter, Sam Walton, Booker T. Washington, George Washington, John Washington, John Wayne, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Phillis Wheatley, Walt Whitman, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Roger Williams, John Winthrop, Frank Lloyd Wright, Orville Wright, Wilbur Wright, Alvin C. York, Cy Young, and Lorenzo de Zavala.”
donald trump ki kicsodája az amerikai történelemben
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Ernest Cossart.
Filmografía
Cine
1916: The Pursuing Vengeance, de Martin Sabine.
1935: The Scoundrel, de Ben Hecht y Charles MacArthur.
1936: El gran Ziegfeld, de Robert Z. Leonard.
1936: Three Smarts Girls, de Henry Koster.
1936: Murder with Pictures, de Charles Barton.
1937: Angel, de Ernst Lubitsch.
1937: Champagne valse, de A. Edward Sutherland.
1939: Zaza, de George Cukor.
1939: Tower of London, de Rowland V. Lee.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow Up, de Henry Koster.
1939: The Light that Failed, de William A. Wellman
1939: Lady of the Tropics, de Jack Conway.
1940: Kitty Foyle, de Sam Wood.
1940: Tom Brown's School Days, de Robert Stevenson.
1941: Skylark, de Mark Sandrich.
1942: Kings Row, de Sam Wood.
1945: Love Letters, de William Dieterle.
1945: Tonight and every Night, de Victor Saville.
1946: Cluny Brown, de Ernst Lubitsch.
1946: The Jolson Story, de Alfred E. Green
1947: Love from a Stranger, de Richard Whorf.
1949: John Loves Mary, de David Butler.
Teatro (Broadway)
1908: The Girls of Gottenberg, música de Ivan Caryll y Lionel Monckton, letras de Adrian Ross y Basil Hood.
1910: Mrs. Dot, de William Somerset Maugham, con Billie Burke.
1910: Love among the Lions, de Winchell Smith a partir de F. Anstey, con Ivan F. Simpson
1911: The Zebra, de Paul M. Potter a partir de Marcel Nancey y Paul Armont.
1912: The Typhoon, de Emil Nyitray y Byron Ongley a partir de Menyhert Lengyel.
1914: Marrying Money, de Washington Pezey y Bertram Marbugh.
1915: Androcles and the Lion, de George Bernard Shaw.
1915: The Man who married a Dumb Wife, de Anatole France, con Isabel Jeans.
1915: El sueño de una noche de verano, de William Shakespeare, con Isabel Jeans.
1915: The Doctor's Dilemma, de George Bernard Shaw.
1915: Sherman was right, de Frank Mandel.
1920-1921: The Skin Game, de John Galsworthy.
1921: The Title, de Arnold Bennett, interpretada y dirigida por Lumsden Hare.
1922: HE Who gets slapped, de Leónidas Andreiev, adaptada por Gregory Zilboorg, con Richard Bennett, Margalo Gillmore, Edgar Stehli, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1922: From Morn to Midnight, de Georg Kaiser, adaptada por Ashley Dukes, con Allyn Joslyn, Edgar Stehli, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1922-1923: Seis personajes en busca de autor, de Luigi Pirandello, adaptada por Edward Storer, con Florence Eldridge.
1923: The Love Habit, adaptación de Gladys Unger a partir de Pour avoir Adrienne, de Louis Verneuil, con Florence Eldridge.
1923: Casanova, de Lorenzo De Azertis, adaptada por Sidney Howard.
1923-1924: Santa Juana, de George Bernard Shaw, con Henry Travers.
1924: Seis personajes en busca de autor.
1924: The Steam Roller, de Laurence Eyre.
1924-1925: Cándida, de George Bernard Shaw, con Pedro de Cordoba.
1925-1926: Arms and the Man, de George Bernard Shaw, con Pedro de Cordoba y Henry Travers.
1926: The Chief Thing, de Nikolaï Evreinov, adaptada por Leo Randole y Herman Bernstein, con Romney Brent, Edward G. Robinson, Lee Strasberg, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1926-1927: Loose Ankles, de Sam Janney.
1926-1927: What never dies, de Alexander Engel, adaptada por Ernest Boyd.
1927-1928: The Doctor's Dilemma, de George Bernard Shaw, con Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1928: Marco Millions, de Eugene O'Neill, escenografía de Rouben Mamoulian, con Robert Barrat, Albert Dekker, Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Vincent Sherman y Henry Travers.
1928: Volpone, de Ben Jonson, adaptada por Ruth Langner, con Albert Dekker, Margalo Gillmore, Alfred Lunt, Vincent Sherman, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1928-1929: Caprice, de Philip Moeller, con Douglass Montgomery.
1929: Becky Sharp, de Langdon Mitchell, a partir de La feria de las vanidades, de William Makepeace Thackeray, con Etienne Girardot, Arthur Hohl, Basil Sydney y Leonard Willey.
1930: The Apple Cart, de George Bernard Shaw, con Violet Kemble-Cooper, Tom Powers, Claude Rains y Helen Westley.
1930: Milestones, de Arnold Bennett y Edward Knoblauch, con Beulah Bondi y Selena Royle.
1931: Getting Married, de George Bernard Shaw, con Romney Brent, Dorothy Gish, Henry Travers y Helen Westley.
1931: The Way of the World, de William Congreve, con Walter Hampden, Gene Lockhart, Kathleen Lockhart, Selena Royle y Cora Witherspoon.
1931: The Roof, de John Galsworthy, con Henry Hull y Selena Royle.
1932: The Devil passes, de Benn W. Levy, con Eric Blore, Arthur Byron, Mary Nash y Basil Rathbone.
1932: Too true to be good, de George Bernard Shaw, escenografía de Leslie Banks, con Leo G. Carroll y Claude Rains.
1933: The Mask and the Face, de W. Somerset Maugham, con Leo G. Carroll y Humphrey Bogart
1933-1934: Mary of Scotland, de Maxwell Anderson, con Helen Hayes, Edgar Barrier, George Coulouris, Philip Merivale, Moroni Olsen y Leonard Willey.
1935: Accent on Youth, de Benn W. Levy
1937: Madame Bovary, de Benn W. Levy, a partir de Gustave Flaubert, con Eric Portman y O. Z. Whitehead.
1945: Devils Galore, de Eugene Vale.
1948: The Play's the Thing, de Ferenc Molnár, adaptada por P. G. Wodehouse, con Louis Calhern, Francis Compton y Faye Emerson.
1949: The Ivy Green, de Mervyn Nelson, con Hurd Hatfield.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Cossart
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Richard Cromwell (born LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh, also known as Roy Radabaugh; January 8, 1910 – October 11, 1960) was an American actor. His career was at its pinnacle with his work in Jezebel (1938) with Bette Davis and Henry Fonda and again with Fonda in John Ford's Young Mr. Lincoln (1939). Cromwell's fame was perhaps first assured in The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935), sharing top billing with Gary Cooper and Franchot Tone.
That film was the first major effort directed by Henry Hathaway and it was based upon the popular novel by Francis Yeats-Brown. The Lives of a Bengal Lancer earned Paramount Studios a nomination for Best Picture in 1935, though Mutiny on the Bounty instead took the top award at the Academy Awards that year.
Leslie Halliwell in The Filmgoer's Companion, summed up Cromwell's enduring appeal when he described him as "a leading man, [the] gentle hero of early sound films."
Cromwell was born LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh in Long Beach, California, the second of five children, to his mother Fay B. (Stocking) and his father, Ralph R. Radabaugh, who was an inventor. Among Ralph's patented creations was the amusement-park swing ride called the "Monoflyer", a variation of which is still in use at many carnivals today. In 1918, when young "Roy" was still in grade school, his father died suddenly, one of the millions of people who perished during the "Spanish flu" pandemic.
Later, while enrolled as a teenager in the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles on a scholarship, young Roy helped to support his family with odd jobs. The school was the precursor of the California Institute of the Arts, and it was there where he met fellow classmate Edith Posener. Posener, later known as Edith Head, would become one of the leading costume designers in American film history.
Cromwell ran a shop in Hollywood where he sold pictures, made lampshades, and designed colour schemes for houses. As Cromwell developed his talents for lifelike mask-making and oil painting, he formed friendships in the late 1920s with various film starlets who posed for him and collected his works, including Tallulah Bankhead, Joan Crawford, Greta Garbo, Claire Dubrey and Ann Sothern. Actress and future Academy Award-winner Marie Dressler was also a friend; the two would later share top-billing in the early talkie film Emma.
Still known as "Roy Radabaugh", he had just two days in film extra work on the side, and can be seen in King of Jazz (1930), along with the film's star, Paul Whiteman and his orchestra. On a whim, friends encouraged Roy to audition in 1930 for the remake of the Richard Barthelmess silent: Tol'able David (1930). Radabaugh won the role over thousands of hopefuls, and in storybook fashion, Harry Cohn gave him his screen name and launched his career. Cromwell earned $75 per week for his work on Tol'able David. Noah Beery Sr. and John Carradine co-starred in the film. Later, Cohn signed Cromwell to a multi-year contract based on the strength of his performance and success in his first venture at the box-office. Amidst the flurry of publicity during this period, Cromwell toured the country, even meeting President Herbert Hoover in Washington, D.C.
Cromwell by then had maintained a deep friendship with Marie Dressler, which continued until her death from cancer in 1934. Dressler was nominated for a second Best Actress award for her 1932 portrayal of the title role in Emma.
With that film, Dressler demonstrated her profound generosity to other performers: Dressler personally insisted that her studio bosses cast Cromwell on a loan-out in the lead opposite her — it was another break that helped sustain his rising status in Hollywood. Emma also starred Myrna Loy in one of her earlier screen performances. After production on Emma was completed, Director Clarence Brown tested Cromwell for the male lead in his next feature: The Son-Daughter, which was set to star Helen Hayes. However, the part of the oriental prince ultimately went to Ramón Novarro, and Cromwell never again worked at MGM.
Cromwell's next role in 1932 was on loan to RKO and was as Mike in Gregory La Cava's, The Age of Consent, co-starring Eric Linden and Dorothy Wilson. Cromwell is also remembered during this period in Hoop-La (1933), where he is seduced by Clara Bow. This film is considered the swan song of Bow's career. Next, the much in demand Cromwell starred in Tom Brown of Culver that year, as well.
Around this period in his career in the early to mid-30s, Cromwell also did some print ads and promotional work for Lucky Strike brand cigarettes. According to his niece, Joan Radabaugh, Cromwell was a very heavy smoker. Nevertheless, at his home he was always the gracious host, as his niece related, and as such he took great care to empty the ashtrays regularly, almost to the point of obsession.
Next up, was an early standout performance by Cromwell in the role as the leader of the youth gang in Cecil B. DeMille's now cult-favorite, This Day and Age (1933). To ensure that Cromwell's character used current slang, DeMille asked high school student Horace Hahn to read the script and comment (at the time, Hahn was senior class president at Los Angeles High School). While again on loan from Columbia, Cromwell's by then salary of $200 per week was paid by Paramount Pictures, DeMille's studio. Diana Serra Cary, in her biography of Jackie Coogan, relates an episode on the set wherein Cromwell came to the aid of actress Judith Allen:
I watched as he (DeMille) systematically reduced ingenue ... Allen to screaming hysterics by calling her every insulting name in the book in front of company and crew simply to bring on tears ... Cromwell was the only man on the set who dared confront the tyrannical DeMille. White with rage, Cromwell stopped the scene and threatened to deck him if he didn't let up on the devastated girl. He (Cromwell) then drove her home himself. After that courageous act the chivalric Cromwell was unanimously praised as a veritable dragon slayer by everyone who had witnessed that scene.
After a promising start, Cromwell's many early pictures at Columbia Pictures and elsewhere were mostly inconsequential and are largely forgotten today. Cromwell starred with Will Rogers in Life Begins at 40 for Fox Film Corporation in 1935, it was one of Rogers' last roles and Poppy for Paramount in 1936 wherein Cromwell played the suitor of W.C. Fields' daughter, Rochelle Hudson. In 1937, he was the young bank-robber in love with Helen Mack and on the lam from Lionel Atwill in The Wrong Road for RKO.
In 1936, Cromwell took a detour in his career to Broadway for the chance to star as an evil cadet in an original play by Joseph Viertel, So Proudly We Hail!. The military drama was directed by future film director Charles Walters, co-starred Edward Andrews and Eddie Bracken, and opened to much fanfare. The reviews of the play at the time called Cromwell's acting "a striking portrayal" (New York Herald Tribune) and his performance an "astonishing characterization" (New York World Telegram). The New York Times said that in the play, Cromwell "ran the gamut of emotions". However, the play closed after only 14 performances at the 46th Street Theater.
By now, Cromwell had shed his restrictive Columbia contract, with its handsome $500 per week salary, and pursued acting work as a freelancer in other media as well. On July 15, 1937, Cromwell guest-starred on The Royal Gelatin Hour hosted by Rudy Vallee, in a dramatic skit opposite Fay Wray. Enjoying the experience, Cromwell had his agent secure for him an audition for the role of Kit Marshall, on the soap opera Those We Love, first on NBC Radio and then CBS Radio. As a regular on the Monday night program which ran from 1938 until 1942, Cromwell played opposite Nan Grey who played Kit's twin sister Kathy. Cromwell as Kit was later replaced by Bill Henry. Rounding out the cast were Robert Cummings and Gale Gordon.
In the late 1930s, Cromwell appeared in Storm Over Bengal, for Republic Pictures, in order to capitalize on the success of The Lives of a Bengal Lancer. Aside from the aforementioned standout roles in Jezebel and The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, Cromwell did another notable turn as defendant Matt Clay to Henry Fonda's title-performance in Young Mr. Lincoln (1939).
During this period, Cromwell was continuing to enjoy the various invitations coming his way as a member of the A-list Hollywood social circuit. According to Bob Thomas, in his biography of Joan Crawford, Cromwell was a regular at the Saturday Night dinner parties of his former co-star Franchot Tone and then-wife Crawford. Other guests whom Cromwell dined with there included Barbara Stanwyck and then-husband Frank Fay, and William Haines and his partner Jimmie Shields. During the freewheeling heyday of West L.A. nightlife in the late 30s, Cromwell is said by author Charles Higham to have carried on a sometime, though obviously very discreet, affair with aviator and businessman Howard Hughes.
In 1939, Cromwell again tried his luck on the stage in a regional production of Sutton Vane's play Outward Bound featuring Dorothy Jordan as his co-star. The cast of the production at the Los Angeles Biltmore Theater also included Cora Witherspoon and Reginald Denny
Cromwell served during the last two years of World War II with the United States Coast Guard, along with fellow actor and enlistee Cesar Romero. Actor Gig Young was also a member of this branch of the service during the war. During this period, Cole Porter rented Cromwell's home in the Hollywood Hills, where Porter worked at length on Panama Hattie. Director James Whale was a personal friend, for whom Cromwell had starred in The Road Back (1937), the ill-fated sequel to All Quiet on the Western Front. With the war's end, and upon returning to California from the Pacific after nearly three years of service with the Coast Guard, Cromwell acted in local theater productions. He also signed on for live performances in summer stock in the East during this period.
When in town, Cromwell was a fixture within the Hollywood social scene. According to the book Cut! Hollywood Murders, Accidents and Other Tragedies, Cromwell was a regular at George Cukor's "boys nights".
Back in California for good, Cromwell was married once, briefly (1945–1946), to actress Angela Lansbury, when she was 19 and Cromwell was 35. Cromwell and Lansbury eloped and were married in a small civil ceremony on September 27, 1945, in Independence, California. In her authorized biography, Balancing Act, Lansbury recounts her life with Cromwell, as well as the couple's close friendship with Zachary Scott and his first wife, Elaine. Lansbury and Cromwell have stars within walking distance of each other on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Cromwell made just one statement to the press regarding his wife of nine months and one of her habits: "All over the house, tea bags. In the middle of the night she'd get up and start drinking tea. It nearly drove me crazy."
According to the biography: Angela Lansbury, A Life on Stage and Screen, Lansbury stated in a 1966 interview that her first marriage, "was a mistake" and that she learned from it. She stated, "I wouldn't have not done it", and, "I was too young at 19. [The marriage] shouldn't have happened." Articles based on interviews with Lansbury have stated that Cromwell was gay. Cromwell and Lansbury remained friends until his death in 1960.
Before World War II, in the early 1940s, Universal Pictures released Enemy Agent starring Cromwell as a draftsman who thwarts the Nazis. In 1942 he then went on to appear in marginal but still watchable fare such as Baby Face Morgan, which co-starred Mary Carlisle and was produced by Producers Releasing Corporation, one of the "Poverty Row" studios.
Cromwell enjoyed a career boost, if not a critically acclaimed performance, in the film adaptation of the hit radio serial: Cosmo Jones, Crime Smasher (1943), opposite Gale Storm. Next up at Monogram Pictures he was cast as a doctor working covertly for the police department to catch the mobsters in the very forgettable, though endearing Riot Squad, wherein his "fiancée", Rita Quigley, breaks their engagement. Cromwell's break from films due to his stint in the Service meant that he was not much in demand after the War's end, and he retired from films after his comeback fizzled. His last role was in a noir flick of 1948, Bungalow 13. All told, Cromwell's film career spanned 39 films.
In the 1950s, Cromwell went back to artistic roots and studied ceramics. He built a pottery studio at his home. The home still stands today and is located in the hills above Sunset Boulevard on North Miller Drive. There, he successfully designed coveted decorative tiles for himself and for his industry friends, which, according to his niece, Joan Radabaugh, he marketed under his stage name.
Around this time, Baby Peggy Montgomery (a.k.a. Diana Serra Cary), who had appeared in This Day and Age with Cromwell many years earlier, recalled visiting Cromwell at his home along with her late husband during this period to see his "beautiful ceramic screen which had won him a prize at the L.A. County Fair." His original tiles as well as his large decorative art deco-style wall paintings of Adam and Eve can still be seen today in the mezzanine off the balcony of the restored Pantages Theatre in Hollywood, which is today considered a noted architectural landmark.
Under the name Radabaugh, Cromwell wrote extensively, producing several published stories and an unfinished novel in the 1950s. After years of heavy drinking with a social circle of friends that included the likes of Christopher Isherwood, Cromwell ultimately changed his ways and became an early participant and supporter of Alcoholics Anonymous in the Los Angeles Area.
In July 1960, Cromwell signed with producer Maury Dexter for 20th Century Fox's planned production of The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come, co-starring Jimmie Rodgers, Bob Dix (son of Richard Dix), and Neil Hamilton who replaced Cromwell in the film. Cromwell became ill and died on October 11, 1960 in Hollywood of liver cancer, at the age of 50. He is interred at Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana, California.
Cromwell's legacy is preserved today by his nephew Dan Putnam, and his cousin Bill Keane IV, both of the Conejo Valley in Southern California, as well as the family of his late niece, Joan Radabaugh, of the Central Coast. In 2005, Keane donated materials relating to Cromwell's radio performances to the Thousand Oaks Library's Special Collection, "The American Radio Archive". In 2007, Keane donated memorabilia relating to Cromwell's film career and ceramics work to the AMPAS Margaret Herrick Library in Beverly Hills.
Cromwell was mentioned in Gore Vidal's satirical novel Myra Breckinridge (1968) as "the late Richard Cromwell, so satisfyingly tortured in Lives of a Bengal Lancer".
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tradcatholic · 4 years
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WHEN YOU START PRAYING THE DAILY ROSARY, YOU CAN STOP FEARING DEATH...
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The Fifteen Promises of Mary Granted to those who Recite the Rosary Daily
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The Blessed Virgin Mary Promised to Saint Dominic and to all who follow that "Whatever you ask in the Rosary will be granted." She left for all Christians Fifteen Promises to those who recite the Holy Rosary.
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Imparted to Saint Dominic and Blessed Alan de la Roche
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1. Whoever shall faithfully serve me by the recitation of the Rosary, shall receive signal graces.
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2. I promise my special protection and the greatest graces to all those who shall recite the Rosary.
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3. The Rosary shall be a powerful armor against hell, it will destroy vice, decrease sin, and defeat heresies.
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4.The Rosary will cause virtue and good works to flourish; it will obtain for souls the abundant mercy of God; it will withdraw the hearts of men from the love of the world and its vanities, and will lift them to the desire for eternal things. Oh, that souls would sanctify themselves by this means.
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5. The soul which recommends itself to me by the recitation of the Rosary, shall not perish.
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6. Whoever shall recite the Rosary devoutly, applying himself to the consideration of its sacred mysteries shall never be conquered by misfortune. God will not chastise him in His justice, he shall not perish by an unprovided death; if he be just he shall remain in the grace of God, and become worthy of eternal life.
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7. Whoever shall have a true devotion for the Rosary shall not die without the sacraments of the Church.
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8. Those who are faithful to recite the Rosary shall have during their life and at their death the light of God and the plenititude of His graces; at the moment of death they shall participate in the merits of the saints in paradise.
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9. I shall deliver from Purgatory those who have been devoted to the Rosary.
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10. The faithful children of the Rosary shall merit a high degree of glory in Heaven.
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11. You shall obtain all you ask of me by the recitation of the Rosary.
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12. All those who propagate the Holy Rosary shall be aided by me in their necessities.
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13. I have obtained from my Divine Son that all the advocates of the Rosary shall have for intercessors the entire celestial court during their life and at the hour of death.
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14. All who recite the Rosary are my sons and daughters, and brothers and sisters of my only Son Jesus Christ.
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15. Devotion of my Rosary is a great sign of predestination.
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Don't let anyone tell you that praying the Rosary is "meaningless repetition" (when we don't pray it, we don't know it, anyway, and how could we?). If you ever feel the temptation to stop, because it feels "tedious," that's when you keep going, if only because love is not a feeling, but an act of the will. Take your time; praying it effectively and loving it is gradually learned. And the appetite does come with the meal. Turn "tedium" into persistence.
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The Rosary is the ‘weapon’ for these times.” -Padre Pio
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“Give me an army saying the Rosary and I will conquer the world.” – Blessed Pope Pius IX
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“The greatest method of praying is to pray the Rosary.” – Saint Francis de Sales
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“Some people are so foolish that they think they can go through life without the help of the Blessed Mother. Love the Madonna and pray the rosary, for her Rosary is the weapon against the evils of the world today. All graces given by God pass through the Blessed Mother.” Padre Pio
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“Go to the Madonna. Love her! Always say the Rosary. Say it well. Say it as often as you can! Be souls of prayer. Never tire of praying, it is what is essential. Prayer shakes the Heart of God, it obtains necessary graces!” -Padre Pio
“The Rosary is a powerful weapon to put the demons to flight and to keep oneself from sin…If you desire peace in your hearts, in your homes, and in your country, assemble each evening to recite the Rosary. Let not even one day pass without saying it, no matter how burdened you may be with many cares and labors.” – Pope Pius XI
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“The Rosary is the most excellent form of prayer and the most efficacious means of attaining eternal life. It is the remedy for all our evils, the root of all our blessings. There is no more excellent way of praying.” Pope Leo XIII
“The Most Holy Virgin in these last times in which we live has given a new efficacy to the recitation of the Rosary to such an extent that there is no problem, no matter how difficult it is, whether temporal or above all spiritual, in the personal life of each one of us, of our families…that cannot be solved by the Rosary. There is no problem, I tell you, no matter how difficult it is, that we cannot resolve by the prayer of the Holy Rosary.” -Sister Lucia dos Santos of Fatima
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“The Rosary is a long chain that links heaven and earth. One end of it is in our hands and the other end is in the hands of the Holy Virgin…The Rosary prayer rises like incense to the feet of the Almighty. Mary responds at once like a beneficial dew, bringing new life to human hearts.”
St. Therese of Lisieux
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“When people love and recite the Rosary they find it makes them better.” -St. Anthony Mary Claret
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The Rosary is the most beautiful and the most rich in graces of all prayers; it is the prayer that touches most the Heart of the Mother of God…and if you wish peace to reign in your homes, recite the family Rosary.~Pope Saint Pius X
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When you say your Rosary, the angels rejoice, the Blessed Trinity delights in it, my Son finds joy in it too, and I myself am happier than you can possibly guess. After the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, there is nothing in the Church that I love as much as the Rosary.~Our Lady to Blessed Alan de la Roche
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One day, through the Rosary and the Scapular, Our Lady will save the world.~Saint Dominic
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Even if you are on the brink of damnation, even if you have one foot in hell, even if you have sold your soul to the devil as sorcerers do who practice black magic, and even if you are a heretic as obstinate as a devil, sooner or later you will be converted and will amend your life and will save your soul,IF YOU SAY THE HOLY ROSARY devoutly every day until death for the purpose of knowing the truth and obtaining contrition and pardon for your sins-Saint Louis de Montfort
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“When you say your Rosary, the angels rejoice, the Blessed Trinity delights in it, my Son finds joy in it too, and I myself am happier than you can possibly guess. After the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, there is nothing in the Church that I love as much as the Rosary.” - Our Lady to Blessed Alan de la Roche
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Even if You Pray the Rosary for Years and See No Improvement Spiritually, Do Not Give Up. Mary and Jesus Will Always Come to Your Aide.
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Imprimatur: Patrick J. Hayes, D.D. Archbishop of New York
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blackkudos · 4 years
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Robert Hooks
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Robert Hooks (born Bobby Dean Hooks, April 18, 1937) is an American actor, producer, and activist. He is most recognizable to the public for his more than 100 roles in films, television, and stage. Most famously, Hooks, along with Douglas Turner Ward and Gerald S. Krone, founded The Negro Ensemble Company (NEC). The NEC is credited with the launch of the careers of many major black artists of all disciplines, while creating a body of performance literature over the last thirty years, providing the backbone of African-American theatrical classics. Additionally, Hooks is the sole founder of two significant black theatre companies: the D.C. Black Repertory Company, and New York's Group Theatre Workshop.
Biography
Early life
The youngest of five children, Hooks was born in Foggy Bottom, Washington, D.C. to Mae Bertha (née Ward), a seamstress, and Edward Hooks who had moved from Rocky Mount, North Carolina with their four other children, Bernice, Caroleigh, Charles Edward "Charlie", and James Walter "Jimmy". Named Bobby Dean Hooks at birth, Robert was their first child born "up-north" and the first to be born in a hospital. His father, Edward, died in a work accident on the railroad in 1939.
Hooks attended Stevens Elementary School. In 1945, at the insistence of his sister Bernice who was doing community arts outreach for youngsters at Francis Junior High School, he performed the lead in his first play, The Pirates of Penzance, at the age of nine. From the ages of 6 to 12, Bobby Dean journeyed with his siblings to Lucama, North Carolina to work the tobacco fields for his uncle's sharecropping farm as a way to help earn money for the coming school year in D.C.
In 1954, just as Brown vs. Board of Education was being implemented in the north, he moved to Philadelphia to be with his mother, her second husband, and his half-sister, Safia Abdullah (née Sharon Dickerson). Hooks experienced his first integrated school experience at West Philadelphia High School. Hooks soon joined the drama club and began acting in plays by William Shakespeare and Samuel Beckett. He was graduated in 1956, passing on a scholarship to Temple University in order to pursue a career as a stage actor at the Bessie V. Hicks School of Theatre (alongside Charles Dierkop and Bruce Dern, with whom he second-acted plays doing their pre-Broadway tryouts in Philadelphia) while working at Browning King, a men's tailor shop at Fourteenth and Chestnut streets.
Career
Having trained at the Bessie V. Smith School of Theatre in Philadelphia, and after seeing A Raisin in the Sun in its Philadelphia tryout in February 1959, Hooks moved to New York to pursue acting. In April 1960, as Bobby Dean Hooks, he made his Broadway debut in A Raisin in the Sun replacing Louis Gossett, Jr. who would be doing the film version. He then continued to do its national tour. He then stepped into the Broadway production of A Taste of Honey, replacing Billy Dee Williams; then repeating the same national tour trajectory as he had done for "Raisin..." the previous year. In early 1962 he next appeared as the lead in Jean Genet's The Blacks, replacing James Earl Jones as the male lead, leaving briefly that same year to appear on Broadway again in Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright before stepping back into the lead role in The Blacks in 1963. He then returned to Broadway, first in Ballad for Bimshire and then in the short-lived 1964 David Merrick revival of The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Any More (as a character created by Tennessee Williams for this revival) and starring Tallulah Bankhead and Tab Hunter in his only stage performance. Immediately thereafter, in March 24, 1964 he originated the role of Clay in Amiri Baraka's Dutchman. With this play, on the advice of Roscoe Lee Brown, Hooks became known as, Robert Hooks. He also originated roles on the New York stage in Where's Daddy? for which he won the Theatre World Award and he was nominated for Best Male Lead in a Musical for Hallelujah Baby while he was simultaneously starring in David Susskind's N.Y.P.D.—the first African American lead on a television drama.
In 1968 Hooks was the host of the new public affairs television program, Like It Is.
Hooks was nominated for a Tony for his lead role in the musical, Hallelujah, Baby!, has received both the Pioneer Award and the NAACP Image Award for Lifetime Achievement, and has been inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame. He also won an Emmy for his PBS special, Voices of Our People.
Significant roles for which Hooks is known include Reeve Scott in Hurry Sundown (1967), Mr. T. in the blaxploitation film Trouble Man (1972), grandpa Gene Donovan in the comedy Seventeen Again (2000), and Fleet Admiral Morrow in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984). He also appeared on television in an episode of the NBC crime drama series The Eddie Capra Mysteries in 1978 and portrayed Doctor Walcott in the 1980s television series Dynasty.
Activism
Arts and Culture
In 1964, as a result of a speaking engagement at the Chelsea Civil Rights Committee (then connected to the Hudson Guild Settlement House) he founded The Group Theatre Workshop (GTW), a tuition-free environment for disadvantaged urban teens who expressed a desire to explore acting. Among the instructors were Barbara Ann Teer, Frances Foster, Hal DeWindt, Lonne Elder III, and Ronnie Mack. Alumni include Antonio Fargas, Hattie Winston, and Daphne Maxwell Reid.
The Group Theatre Workshop was folded into the tuition-free training arm of the The Negro Ensemble Company (NEC) founded in 1967 with Douglas Turner Ward and Gerald S. Krone with a $1.3 million grant from the Ford Foundation under the auspices of W. McNeil Lowry.
From 1969-1972, Hooks served as an original board member of Black Academy of Arts and Letters (BAAL) (located in New York) alongside C. Eric Lincoln, President; John O. Killens, Alvin F. Poussaint, and Charles White. Chartered by the State of New York, BAAL's mission was to bring together Black artists and scholars from around the world. Additional members included: Julian Adderley, Alvin Ailey, Margaret Walker, James Baldwin, Imamu Baraka, Romare Bearden, Harry Belafonte, Lerone Bennett, Arna Bontemps, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee Davis, St. Clair Drake, Ernest Dunbar, Katherine Dunham, Lonne Elder III, Duke Ellington, Alex Haley, Ruth Inge Hardison, Vertis Hayes, Chester Himes, Lena Horne, Jacob Lawrence, Elma Lewis, Henry Lewis, Paule Marshall, Donald McKayle, Arthur Mitchell, Frederick O’Neal, Gordon Parks, Sidney Poitier, Benjamin Quarles, Lloyd Richards, Lucille D. Roberts, and Nina Simone.
In response to the violence in his home town of Washington, D.C. in the wake of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, and aided by a small grant from the Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation, Hooks took a leave of absence from the Negro Ensemble Company to create The D.C. Black Repertory Company (DCBRC, 1970-1981). As Founder and Executive Director, the DCBRC was intended as a further exploration of the ability of the arts to create healing. The a capella group Sweet Honey in the Rock was created and developed within its workshop process.
The Inner Voices (Lorton Prison arts training program, 1971) proved to be a result of the beneficial effect of the DCBRC in the D.C. area. In response to a direct plea from an inmate, Rhozier "Roach" Brown, who was serving a life sentence in Lorton, Hooks' D.C. Black Repertory Company structured the first prison-based arts program in the United States. While it is the norm now, it was then a revolutionary attempt at rehabilitation through the arts. Eventually The Inner Voices performed more than 500 times in other prisons, including a Christmas special entitled, "Holidays, Hollowdays." Due to Roach's work, President Gerald Ford commuted his sentence on Christmas Day, 1975.
His relocation to the West Coast redirected Hooks' approach to parity in the arts with his involvement with The Bay Area Multicultural Arts Initiative (1988) as a board member and grant facilitator-judge. Funded by monies from a unique coalition made up of the San Francisco Foundation (a community foundation); Grants for the Arts of the San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund, and The National Endowment for the Arts, the function of this organization was the funding of deserving local multicultural arts organizations.
In 1992, Hooks co-founded (with writer Lonne Elder III) Arts in Action. Located in South Central Los Angeles, this was a film and television training center established to guide individuals who aspired to careers in film production. It formulated strategies and training for securing entry-level jobs. Courses included: career development workshops; pre-production and production for film and television; creative problem solving in production management; directing for stage and screen—principles and practices; also the craft of assistant directors, script supervisor, technicians, wardrobe, make-up, etc.
The Negro Ensemble Company of Los Angeles (NEC-LA) (1994-1997) was created because so many New York members and original members had relocated to the west coast. Hooks, as founder and executive director enlisted alumni from his New York Negro Ensemble Company to serve as board members: Denise Nicholas, Denzel Washington, James Earl Jones, Laurence Fishburne, Richard Roundtree, Samuel L. Jackson. NEC-LA's goal was to be a new and innovative multi-ethnic cultural project that strived to achieve the community effectiveness and professional success of its parent organization.
Personal life
Hooks is the father of actor, television and film director Kevin Hooks. He married Lorrie Gay Marlow (actress, author, artist) on June 15, 2008. Previously, he was married to Yvonne Hickman and Rosie Lee Hooks.
Awards
1966 - Theatre World Award (1965–66 ) for "Where's Daddy?" (The Billy Rose Theatre)
1979 - American Black Achievement Award - Ebony Magazine
1982 - Emmy Award for Producing (1982) Voices of Our People: In Celebration of Black Poetry (KCET-TV/PBS)
1966 - Tony Nomination, Lead Role in a Musical for Hallelujah, Baby
1985 - Inducted into The Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame, recipient Oscar Micheaux Award (1985)
1986 - March 2nd declared Robert Hooks Day by the City of Los Angeles, Mayor Tom Bradley
1987 - Excellence in Advertising and Communications to Black Communities from CEBA (Excellence in Advertising and Communications to Black Communities)
2000 - Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa honorary degree, Bowie State University
2000 - May 25th declared Robert Hooks Day in Washington, D.C.
2005 - Beverly Hills/Hollywood Chapter NAACP Image Award for Lifetime Achievement
2005 - Beverly Hills/Hollywood Chapter NAACP Trailblazer Award to the Negro Ensemble Company
2005 - Trailblazer Award – City of Los Angeles
2006 - The Black Academy of Arts and Letters (TBAAL), Lifetime Achievement Award (Dallas)
2007 - The Black Theatre Alliance Awards / Lifetime Achievement Award
2015 - Living Legend Award (2015) National Black Theatre Festival
2018 - October 18th proclaimed Robert Hooks Day by Mayor Muriel Bowser, Washington, D.C.
2018 - Hooks is entered into The Congressional Record by the Hon. Eleanor Holmes Norton, September 4, 2018, Vol. 164
2018 - Visionary Founder and Creator Award - D.C. Black Repertory Company on its 47th anniversary
Acting Credits
Film
Sweet Love, Bitter (1967) .... Keel Robinson
Hurry Sundown (1967) .... Reeve Scott
Last of the Mobile Hot Shots (1970) .... Chicken
Carter's Army (1970) .... Lt. Edward Wallace
Trouble Man (1972) .... Mr. T
Aaron Loves Angela (1975) .... Beau
Airport '77 (1977) .... Eddie
Fast-Walking (1982) .... William Galliot
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) .... Admiral Morrow
Passenger 57 (1992) .... Dwight Henderson
Posse (1993) .... King David
Fled (1996) .... Lt. Clark
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omegaplus · 4 years
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# 3,089
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Favorite Sampling / Crate-Digging / Classic Finds For The 2010’s.
Walt Barr “Free Spirit”
Azymuth “Jazz Carnival”
Reg Tilsley “Hold The Road”
Willie Bobo “Kojak Theme”
Bobby Lyle “Inner Space”
Marcio Montarroyos “Pedra Bonilla”
Rubba “Way Star”
Eddie Henderson “Involuntary Bliss”
Jaye P. Morgan “It’s Been So Long“
Eric Gale “Morning Glory”
Tribe “Koke Pt. I & II”
Urbie Green The Fox
Hysear Don Walker “Poo Jo”
Weldon Irvine “Morning Sunrise”
Unit Nine “Night Light”
Larry Bright “Solar Visions”
Sun Ra Nuits De La Fondation Maeght Vol. 1
Gary Davis & His Professor “Stay With Me”
L.A. Boppers “Saturday”
Pop Eye “Lazy Haze”
Phil Upchurch “Black Gold”
Ronnie Laws “Always There”
Sauver Mallia “Future Vision”
Sweet Mixture “House Of Fun And Love”
Tantor “Niederwohren”
Catalyst “New-Found Truths”
Brian Bennett & Alan Hawkshaw “Mermaid”
Clive Hicks “Deserted Factory”
Alan Parker & Alan Hawkshaw “The Difference”
Jack Wilkins “Red Clay”
James Clarke “In Suspension”
Negril self-titled
Blackbyrds, The “Mysterious Vibes”
Bill Loose “Almost Sixteen”
Robert Ashley “Purposeful Lady Slow Afternoon”
Steve Khan “The Blue Man”
Puccio Roelens “A Silness Song”
Robert Viger “Limpidite”
Ramsey Lewis “Skippin’”
Alan Hawkshaw “Cruising”
Keith Mansfield “Love De Luxe”
General Lee & The Space Army Band “We Did It Baby Pt. 1 & 2”
Tony Hymas “Final Inspecton”
Antonio Andolfo Feito Em Casa
James Clarke “Waiting Game”
Alan Hawkshaw “Blue Note”
Bob James “Angela”
Tom Scott “Appolonia (Foxtrata)”
Alan Parker & Mike Moran “Your Smile”
Ethel Beatty “Your Love”
Keith Droste “When You Come Around”
Ojeda Penn “Happiness Is Having You Here”
Walt Barr “Creepin’”
Brass Construction “Don’t Try To Change Me”
Sylvano Santorio “Waves”
William Onyeabor “Better Change Your Mind”
Puccio Roelens “Northern Lights”
Ramsey Lewis “Tambura”
Blackbyrds, The “Mysterious Vibes”
Champaign “I’m On Fire”
Starfire “Make The Most of It”
Dick Walter “The Fat Man”
Don Patterson “The Good Life”
Maynard Ferguson “Mister Mellow”
Death “David’s Dream”
Vic Juris “Leah”
Ramsey Lewis “Sun Goddess”
Stuff “Sun Song”
Nancy Wilson ”I’m In Love”
Undisputed Truth, The “Smiling Faces Sometimes”
Heatwave “Leaving For A Dream”
Eddie Henderson “Beyond Forever”
Keith Mansfield “Routine Procedure”
Players' Association, The “Moon In Pisces”
Jaye P. Morgan “Can’t Hide Love”
Bill Loose “Slight Misgivings”
Bernice Chardiet / Martha Hayes “All By Myself“
Steve Khan “Darling Darling Baby (Sweet Tender Love)”
Gordon’s War “Got To Fan The Flame”
McNeal & Miles “Ja Ja”
Annette Peacock & Paul Bley “A Loss Of Consciousness”
Alan Hawkshaw “Mystique Voyage”
Big Barney “The Whole Damn Thing”
General Lee & The Space Army Band “Magic”
Gene Harris “Losalamitoslatinfunklovesong”
Tomorrow’s People “Open Soul”
Blackbyrds, The “Love Is Love”
Chick Carlton & Mesmeriah “One More Time With Feeling”
Cortex “Huit Octobre”
Flora Purim “Angels”
Francis Monkman “Getting Ready”
Frank Ricotti “Vibes”
Herbie Hancock “Butterfly”
James Mason “I Want Your Love”
Franco Micalizzi “Jessica’s Theme”
Manzel “Midnight Theme”
Sass “I Only Wanted To Love You”
Stars & Bars “Stars And Bars”
Sunburst “Mysterious Vibes”
Mass Production “Slow Bump”
Peter Brown “For Your Love”
Bobby Lyle “Night Breeze”
Brian Bennett “Morning”
Vic Juris “Horizon Drive”
Hailu Mergia & The Walias (ft. Mulatu Astatke) “Yemiasleks Fikir”
Bereket Mengistaab “Lebay”
LaMont Johnson Aces
Alan Hawkshaw “Warm Hearts”
Heatwave “Star Of The Story”
Pasteur Lappe “Mbale (Face To Face With The Truth)”
Joe Beck & David Sanborn “Texas Ann”
Jon Lucien “Sunny Day”
Players' Association, The “Turn The Music Up!”
Richie Cole “New York Afternoon”
Rufus & Chaka Khan “Your Smile”
Shuggie Otis “Pling!”
Alice Coltraine “Galaxy In Turiya”
Stuff “And Here You Are”
Pharoah Sanders “Greeting to Saud (Brother McCoy Tyner)”
Edgar Vercy “La Mer”
Fa-5 self-titled
Iodi “Sonrie”
Joe Moks Boys And Girls
Blackbyrds, The “Lady”
Teddy Lasry “Riverhead”
Brothers Johnson “Tomorrow”
Håkon Graf & Sveinung Hovensjø & Jon Eberson & Jon Christensen “Alive Again”
Favorite Sampling / Crate-Digging / Classic Finds For The Oughts.
Donny Hathaway “Singing This Song To You”
Esther Phillips “That’s All Right With Me”
Gil Scott-Heron “We Almost Lost Detroit”
Isaac Hayes “Hung Up On My Baby”
Marvin Gaye “I Want You” (inst.)
David Axelrod “Warning Pts. 1 & 2”
Pharoah Sanders “Creator Has A Master Plan, The”
Lonnie Liston Smith “Expansions”
Kool & The Gang “Summer Madness”
Roy Ayers Virgin Ubiquity I & II
Rotary Connection “Memory Band”
Cal Tjader “Morning Mist”
Dave Grusin “Either Way”
RAMP “Daylight”
Gil Scott-Heron “A Very Precious Time”
Sun Ra “Yucatan” (Saturn ver.)
Edwin Birdsong “Cola Bottle Baby”
Kool & The Gang “Summer Madness” (live)
Neil Richardson “The Riviera Affair”
Roy Ayers Ubiquity “Show Us A Feeling”
Persuaders, The “We’re Just Trying To Make It”
Sun Ra “Enlightenment”
Les McCann River High River Low
Minnie Riperton “Lovin’ You”
Floaters, The “Float On”
Roy Ayers Ubiquity “Miles (Love’s Silent Dawn)”
Les McCann Layers
John Tropea A Short Trip To Space
Lonnie Liston Smith & The Cosmic Echoes Astral Traveling
Chick Corea “Crystal Silence”
Richard “Groove” Holmes “Onsaya Joy”
Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson Winter In America
Delegation “Oh, Honey”
Heatwave “Always And Forever”
Olympic Runners “Don’t Let Up”
Kool & The Gang “Winter Sadness”
Ronnie Laws “Tidal Wave”
Parliament Funkadelic “One Of Those Funky Things”
Roy Ayers A Tear To A Smile
Galt McDermott Ripped Open By Metal Explosion
Idris Muhammad “Crab Apple”
Alan Parker & John Cameron Afro Rock
Beginning Of The End Funky Nassau
Otto Cesana “Hi”
Syd Dale “Cuban Presto”
Chambers Brothers, The “New Generation”
Chick Corea Friends
Edwin Birdsong “Rapper Dapper Snapper”
Jerry Butler “Got To See If I Can't Get Momma (To Come Back Home)”
Karla Bonoff Restless Nights
Phil Upchurch self-titled
Roy Ayers (Ubiquity) “This Side Of Sunshine”
Billy Cobham “Heather”
Bill Conti “Reflections”
Andre Previn “Executive Party Dance”
Lonnie Liston Smith & The Cosmic Echoes Vision Of A New World
London West End Theatre Orchestra “Apollo 15 (Race Leader)”
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vm4vm0 · 4 years
Video
CHARLOTTE CARDIN - THE KIDS (short film) from Kristof Brandl on Vimeo.
YDA Silver Screen @CANNES2018 New Director Showcase by Ridley Scott @CANNES2018 Best Cinematography @LUX AWARD 2018
Shot on Kodak Vision 3 500T Aaton Penelope 2 perf Arri 435 4 perf
With: Francis La Haye, Mylène Mackay, Hubert Proulx, Anthony Riendeau, Anne-Charlotte Côté, Liam Weisman, Ilan Sawan, Daniel Lapierre, Mathieu Lepage and Louise Latraverse.
V.O by Victoria Diamond & Dusan Dukic
Directed & Edited by Kristof Brandl Written by Kristof Brandl & Shane Patrick Cinematographer: Christophe Collette, CSC Additional Cinematography: Kristof Brandl Executive Producer: Alexandre Auray Line Producer: Clara L’Heureux-Garcia Focus Puller: Maxime Boutin 2nd Camera Assistant: Erin Weisgerber Camera Loader: Robin Rigault 8mm & Super 16mm: Benoît Jones-Vallée & Laurent Schrænen Set Photographer: Gaëlle Leroyer Gaffer: Jacques Girard Best boy: Conrad Roy & Louis Cloutier Key Grip: Stéphane Klopp Best Boy: Marcel Bonneville, Camille Bergeron Bégin Sound Man: Laurent Ouellette, Dominic Remiro Grading: Simon Boisx Art Director: Frédérique Ste-Marie & Maxime Normand Art Assistant: Sophie B.Jacques, Geneviève Boiteau, Véronique Perreault, Yann Filly-Paré Costume: Amanda Van Der Siebes Makeup and Hair: Catherine Brunelle Flame Artist & VFX Supervisor: Flore Mounier @MikrosMPC Special Effects: Remy Couture Special Effects Supervisor: Blood Brothers Stunt Coordinator: Jean-François Lachapelle Riggers: Stéphane Julien et Sébastien Peres 1st Assistant Director: Clara L’Heureux-Garcia 2nd Assistant Director: Mathieu Turcotte Production Coordinator: Gabrielle Dussault Unit Manager: Joseph Liane Key Production Assistant: Jeremy Hughes Production Assistant: Patrice Arseneault, Iskouhie Yacoub, Georges Mazraani Film Lab: MELS Sound Design: Jean-David Perron & Theo "Lewis" Porcet @CULT NATION
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extrabeurre · 4 years
Text
IL PLEUVAIT DES OISEAUX en tête des nominations du Gala Québec Cinéma 2020
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En direct du salon de Guillaume Lambert, les nominations du Gala Québec Cinéma (qui ne fera pas l’objet d’un rassemblement télévisuel cette année, confinement oblige) ont été dévoilées cet après-midi.
En cette année dominée par les réalisatrices, 6 des meilleurs films sont réalisés par des femmes et 3 femmes sont en lice pour l’Iris de la Meilleure réalisation.
On parle bien sûr d’Antigone de Sophie Deraspe (Meilleur film, Meilleure réalisation, Meilleur scénario), La femme de mon frère de Monia Chokri  (Meilleur film, Meilleure réalisation), Kuessipan de Myriam Verreault (Meilleur film, Meilleure réalisation, Meilleur scénario), Jeune Juliette d’Anne Émond (Meilleur film, Meilleur scénario), Il pleuvait des oiseaux  et Louise Archambault (Meilleur film, Meilleur scénario, et 13 nominations au total, le record cette année), et du plus inattendu Fabuleuses de Mélanie Charbonneau (Meilleur film).
Ces films réalisés par des femmes sont rejoints dans les catégories de pointe par les « films de gars » Mafia Inc de Podz (Meilleur film), Sympathie pour le diable de Guillaume de Fontenay (Meilleure réalisation, Meilleur scénario), et  Le vingtième siècle de Matthew Rankin  (Meilleur premier film, Meilleure réalisation).
Un grand oublié : Xavier Dolan, qui a lancé deux longs métrages l’an dernier. On ne s’attendait pas à un couronnement du mal-aimé The Death and Life of John F. Donovan, mais l’excellent Matthias & Maxime aurait mérité plus d’honneurs. Il est quand même en nomination dans les catégories Meilleure interprétation féminine dans un rôle de soutien (Micheline Bernard), Meilleure interprétation masculine dans un rôle de soutien (Pier-Luc Funk), Meilleure direction de la photographie (André Turpin), Meilleur montage (Xavier Dolan), Meilleure musique originale (Jean-Michel Blais) et Meilleur maquillage (Erik Gosselin, Edwina Voda).
Du côté des interprètes, je suis soulagé que mon long métrage québécois préféré depuis longtemps, Le rire de Martin Laroche, ait été au moins reconnu pour les brillantes performances de Léane Labrèche-Dor (Premier rôle féminin) et Micheline Lanctôt (Rôle de soutien féminin).
Il faut aussi souligner les deux nominations comme acteur de Robin Aubert, pour Jeune Juliette (Premier rôle masculin) et Merci pour tout (Rôle de soutien masculin).
Et une pensée pour Andrée Lachapelle, qui nous a quittés récemment, nommée comme Meilleure actrice pour Il pleuvait des oiseaux.
Parlant d’Il pleuvait des oiseaux , félicitations à Will Driving West, un de mes groupes préférés, parmi les finalistes de la catégorie Meilleure musique originale. 
Aussi, je suis très heureux pour l’extraordinaire Je finirai en prison d’Alexandre Dostie, en nomination pour l’Iris du meilleur court métrage.
LISTE COMPLÈTE DES NOMINATIONS
MEILLEUR FILM
Antigone - ACPAV - Marc Daigle
Fabuleuses - GO Films - Nicole Robert
La femme de mon frère - Metafilms - Sylvain Corbeil, Nancy Grant
Il pleuvait des oiseaux - Les Films Outsiders - Ginette Petit
Jeune Juliette - Metafilms - Sylvain Corbeil
Kuessipan - Max Films Média - Félize Frappier
Mafia Inc - Attraction Images - Antonello Cozzolino | Caramel Films - Valérie D'Auteuil, André Rouleau
  MEILLEUR PREMIER FILM
Mad Dog Labine - Jonathan Beaulieu-Cyr, Renaud Lessard - 1er scénario de Jonathan Beaulieu-Cyr, Renaud Lessard
Sympathie pour le diable - Guillaume de Fontenay - 1er scénario de Guillaume de Fontenay, Guillaume Vigneault
Le vingtième siècle - Matthew Rankin - 1er scénario de Matthew Rankin
 MEILLEURE RÉALISATION
Monia Chokri - La femme de mon frère
Guillaume de Fontenay - Sympathie pour le diable
Sophie Deraspe - Antigone
Matthew Rankin - Le vingtième siècle
Myriam Verreault - Kuessipan
MEILLEUR SCÉNARIO
Louise Archambault - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
Jean Barbe, Guillaume de Fontenay, Guillaume Vigneault - Sympathie pour le diable
Sophie Deraspe - Antigone
Anne Émond - Jeune Juliette
Naomi Fontaine, Myriam Verreault - Kuessipan
  MEILLEURE INTERPRÉTATION FÉMININE | PREMIER RÔLE
Anne-Élisabeth Bossé (Sophia) - La femme de mon frère
Anne Dorval (Isabelle Brodeur) - 14 jours 12 nuits
Léane Labrèche-Dor (Valérie) - Le rire
Andrée Lachapelle (Gertrude | Marie-Desneige) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
Noémie O'Farrell (Laurie) - Fabuleuses
MEILLEURE INTERPRÉTATION MASCULINE | PREMIER RÔLE
Robin Aubert (Bernard) - Jeune Juliette
Marc-André Grondin (Vincent «Vince »Gamache) - Mafia Inc
Patrick Hivon (Karim) - La femme de mon frère
Niels Schneider (Paul Marchand) - Sympathie pour le diable
Gilbert Sicotte (Charlie) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
 MEILLEURE INTERPRÉTATION FÉMININE | RÔLE DE SOUTIEN
Micheline Bernard (Francine) - Matthias & Maxime
Juliette Gosselin (Clara Diamond) - Fabuleuses
Micheline Lanctôt (Jeanne) - Le rire
Eve Landry (Rafaëlle [Raf]) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
Geneviève Schmidt (France Gauthier) - Menteur
 MEILLEURE INTERPRÉTATION MASCULINE | RÔLE DE SOUTIEN
Robin Aubert (Réjean) - Merci pour tout
Sergio Castellitto (Francesco « Franck » Paternò) - Mafia Inc
Pier-Luc Funk (Rivette) - Matthias & Maxime
Sasson Gabai (Hichem) - La femme de mon frère
Rémy Girard (Tom) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
 RÉVÉLATION DE L'ANNÉE
Catherine Chabot (Chloé Therrien) - Menteur
Sharon Fontaine-Ishpatao (Mikuan Vollant [16-21ans]) - Kuessipan
Alexane Jamieson (Juliette) - Jeune Juliette
Nahéma Ricci (Antigone) - Antigone
Lilou Roy-Lanouette (Yanna) - Jouliks
 MEILLEURE DISTRIBUTION DES RÔLES
Jacinthe Beaudet, Tobie Fraser, Geneviève Hébert, Myriam Verreault - Kuessipan
Nathalie Boutrie (Casting NB) - Jeune Juliette
Nathalie Boutrie (Casting NB) | Francis Cantin, Bruno Rosato (Casting Cantin Rosato) - Mafia Inc
Sophie Deraspe, Isabelle Couture | Pierre Pageau, Daniel Poisson (Gros Plan) - Antigone
Karel Quinn (Casting Karel Quinn) | Lucie Robitaille (Casting Lucie Robitaille) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
 MEILLEURE DIRECTION ARTISTIQUE
Éric Barbeau - La femme de mon frère
Dany Boivin - Le vingtième siècle
Marie-Claude Gosselin, Jean Lebourdais - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
Sylvain Lemaitre - Jeune Juliette
David Pelletier - Mafia Inc
  MEILLEURE DIRECTION DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE
Yves Bélanger - 14 jours 12 nuits
Nicolas Canniccioni - Kuessipan
Josée Deshaies - La femme de mon frère
Mathieu Laverdière - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
André Turpin - Matthias & Maxime
 MEILLEUR SON
Claude Beaugrand, Michel B. Bordeleau, Bernard Gariépy Strobl, Claude La Haye, Raymond Legault - The Song of Names
Sylvain Bellemare, Jocelyn Caron, Bernard Gariépy Strobl - Sympathie pour le diable
Serge Boivin, Olivier Calvert, Samuel Gagnon-Thibodeau - Ville Neuve
Luc Boudrias, Sylvain Brassard, Jean Camden - Mafia Inc
Bernard Gariépy Strobl, Sacha Ratcliffe, Lynne Trépanier - Le vingtième siècle
 MEILLEUR MONTAGE
Geoffrey Boulangé, Sophie Deraspe - Antigone
Monia Chokri, Justine Gauthier - La femme de mon frère
Xavier Dolan - Matthias & Maxime
Myriam Poirier - 14 jours 12 nuits
Matthew Rankin - Le vingtième siècle
 MEILLEURS EFFETS VISUELS
Alchimie 24 - Alain Lachance, Jean-Pierre Riverin - The Song of Names
Mikros - Véronique Dessard, Philippe Frère - The Hummingbird Project
Oblique FX - Benoit Brière, Louis-Philippe Clavet, Kinga Sabela - Sympathie pour le diable
  MEILLEURE MUSIQUE ORIGINALE
Andréa Bélanger, David Ratté (Will Driving West) - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
Jean-Michel Blais - Matthias & Maxime
Jean Massicotte, Jad Orphée Chami - Antigone
Howard Shore - The Song of Names
Peter Venne - Le vingtième siècle
  MEILLEURS COSTUMES
Valérie Lévesque - Mafia Inc
Ginette Magny - Jouliks
Patricia McNeil - La femme de mon frère
Patricia McNeil - Le vingtième siècle
Caroline Poirier - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
  MEILLEUR MAQUILLAGE
Jeanne Lafond - Jouliks
Léonie Lévesque-Robert - Fabuleuses
Marlène Rouleau - Mafia Inc
Adriana Verbert - Le vingtième siècle
Erik Gosselin, Edwina Voda - Matthias & Maxime
MEILLEURE COIFFURE
Michelle Côté - The Song of Names
Stéphanie Deflandre - Mafia Inc
Nermin Grbic - Le vingtième siècle
Daniel Jacob - Fabuleuses
Martin Lapointe - Il pleuvait des oiseaux
  MEILLEUR FILM DOCUMENTAIRE
Alexandre le fou - Pedro Pires | Pedro Pires
Mad Dog & The Butcher - Les derniers vilains - Thomas Rinfret | Divertissement Breakout - Vito Balenzano, Bruno Rosato | Vélocité International - Valérie Bissonnette
Soleils noirs - Julien Elie | Cinéma Belmopán - Julien Elie
Xalko - Hind Benchekroun, Sami Mermer | Les films de la tortue - Hind Benchekroun | Sami Mermer
Ziva Postec. La monteuse derrière le film Shoah - Catherine Hébert | Les Films Camera Oscura - Christine Falco
  MEILLEURE DIRECTION DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE | FILM DOCUMENTAIRE
Dominic Dorval, Vincent Masse, Thomas Rinfret, Richard Tremblay - Mad Dog & The Butcher - Les derniers vilains
Sami Mermer - Xalko
François Messier-Rheault, Ernesto Pardo - Soleils noirs
Pedro Pires - Alexandre le fou
Pedro Ruiz - Sur les toits Havane
  MEILLEUR MONTAGE | FILM DOCUMENTAIRE
Benoit Côté, Thomas Rinfret - Mad Dog & The Butcher - Les derniers vilains
Sylvia De Angelis, Sophie Leblond, Pedro Pires - Alexandre le fou
Aube Foglia - Soleils noirs
Annie Jean - Ziva Postec. La monteuse derrière le film Shoah
Natalie Lamoureux - Une femme, ma mère
  MEILLEUR SON | FILM DOCUMENTAIRE
Wolfgang Beck, Mustafa Bölükbasi, Kerem Çakir, Huseyin Can Erol, Sonat Hançer, Eric Lebœuf, Bruno Pucella, Ibrahim Tarhan, Yener Yalçin, Tolga Yelekçi - Échos d'Istanbul
Luc Boudrias, Patrice LeBlanc - Une femme, ma mère
Sylvain Brassard, Benoit Leduc, Gaël Poisson Lemay - Alexandre le fou
Shelley Craig, Marie-Pierre Grenier, Luc Léger, Geoffrey Mitchell - La fin des terres
René Portillo - Sur les toits Havane
MEILLEUR COURT MÉTRAGE | FICTION
Je finirai en prison - Alexandre Dostie | Art & Essai - Hany Ouichou
Jojo - Guillaume Laurin | Couronne Nord - Fanny Forest, Julie Groleau, Guillaume Laurin
Juste moi et toi - Sandrine Brodeur-Desrosiers | Les Films Camera Oscura - Johannie Deschambault
SDR - Alexa-Jeanne Dubé | À Deux - Emili Mercier
Une bombe au cœur - Rémi St-Michel | Christal Films Productions - Christian Larouche | Panache Films - Sébastien Létourneau
 MEILLEUR COURT MÉTRAGE | ANIMATION
Le cortège - Pascal Blanchet, Rodolphe Saint-Gelais | Office national du film du Canada - Julie Roy
Le mal du siècle - Catherine Lepage | Office national du film du Canada - Marc Bertrand
Organic - Steven Woloshen | Steven Woloshen
Physique de la tristesse - Theodore Ushev | Office national du film du Canada - Marc Bertrand
Les vêtements - Caroline Blais | Caroline Blais
  FILM S'ÉTANT LE PLUS ILLUSTRÉ À L'EXTÉRIEUR DU QUÉBEC
Antigone - Sophie Deraspe | ACPAV - Marc Daigle | Maison 4:3
La femme de mon frère - Monia Chokri | Metafilms - Sylvain Corbeil, Nancy Grant | Les Films Séville
Genèse - Philippe Lesage | Unité centrale - Galilé Marion-Gauvin | FunFilm Distribution
Kuessipan - Myriam Verreault | Max Films Média - Félize Frappier | Filmoption International
Répertoire des villes disparues - Denis Côté | Couzin Films - Ziad Touma | Maison 4:3
 PRIX DU PUBLIC
La femme de mon frère - Monia Chokri | Les Films Séville | Metafilms - Sylvain Corbeil, Nancy Grant
Il pleuvait des oiseaux - Louise Archambault | MK2 | Mile End | Les Films Outsiders - Ginette Petit
Mafia Inc - Daniel Grou (Podz) | Les Films Séville | Attraction Images - Antonello Cozzolino | Caramel Films - Valérie D'Auteuil, André Rouleau
Menteur - Émile Gaudreault | Les Films Séville | Les Films du Lac - Émile Gaudreault | Cinémaginaire - Denise Robert
Merci pour tout - Louise Archambault | Les Films Séville | Amalga - André Dupuy
  IRIS HOMMAGE
Alanis Obomsawin
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garadinervi · 5 years
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Dialogue: Stéphane Mallarmé – Francis Jammes (1893-1897), A. A. M. Stols, La Haye, 1940
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