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As quickly as 2010 came and went, here we find ourselves in the middle of another exciting awards season. The Golden Globes have been awarded and the 83rd Oscar ceremony is next. When it comes to Hollywood’s highest honors, the Academy’s omissions often provoke more outcry and buzz than the actual winners. The Academy Awards [...]
Posted by Timeea on Friday, February 25, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged 81st Academy Awards, A Wonderful Life, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Film Editing, academy awards, Actor, actress, Adrian Lyne, Alec Coppel, Alex Forrest, alfred hitchcock, America, American film directors, Andy Garcia, Anne Archer, Barry Malkin, Bavaria, Being John Malkovich, Best Music, Bill Murray, Bob Gunton, Brian Grazer, Bruce Nicholson, Caitlin Moran, Carmine Coppola, catholic church, Chuck Gaspar, columnist, critic, Dan Aykroyd, Daniel P. Hanley, David Frost, Dean Tavoularis, director, Double Indemnity, Egon Spengler, Elliot Tyson, Entertainment_Culture, Eric Fellner, film, Film director, Film Editing, Films considered the greatest ever, Francis Ford Coppola, Frank Darabont, Frank J. Urioste, Frank Langella, Frank R. McKelvy, Frost/Nixon, Gary Fettis, George Dutton, George Dzundza, George Milo, Germany, ghostbusters, Glenn Close, Gordon Willis, Hal Pereira, harold ramis, Harry Potter, Henry Bumstead, James Dearden, James Woods, Janet Leigh, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Jerry Goldsmith, Joe Eszterhas, John Bettis, John Bruno, John L. Russell, Joseph Hurley, journalist, Lisa Fruchtman, Mark Vargo, Michael Douglas, Michael Herbick, Michael Kahn, Michael Sheen, Michael Wood, Mike Hill, morgan freeman, Munich, Niki Marvin, Norman Bates, Once Upon A Time in America, Oscar, Oscar ceremony, oscars, Paramount films, Paul Verhoeven, Peter E. Berger, Peter Morgan, Peter Venkman, police detective, poltergeist, president, producer, prominent journalist, Psycho, Ray Parker Jr., Raymond Stantz, repressed energy, Richard Edlund, Richard Francis-Bruce, Richard L. Anderson, Richard Nixon, Robert Clatworthy, Robert De Niro, Robert J. Litt, Roger Deakins, Roger Ebert, Ron Howard, Sam Comer, Samuel Taylor, Seattle, Sergio Leone, Sharon Stone, Sharone Stone, Sherry Lansing, Singin' in The Rain, Sleepless in Seattle, Slumdog Millionaire, Stanley R. Jaffe, Stephen Hunter, Steven Spielberg, sun, SUN CORPORATION, Sun-Times, The Academy Awards, the BAFTA, The Godfather, The Godfather Part II, The Golden Globes, The Magnificent Ambersons, the Oscar, The Shawshank Redemption, The Talented Mr. Ripley, The Washington Post Company, Thomas Newman, Tim Robbins, Times columnist, Tobe Hooper, tom hanks, United States, USD, Vertigo, Walter Murch, Washington, Washington Post, Weaver - Dana Barrett, Willie D. Burton
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has honored and recognized outstanding cinema achievements since 1929, but believe it or not, some of Hollywood’s greatest stars have never won the big award. Who would have thought that legendary Greta Garbo or Marlene Dietrich never won an Oscar? And the list continues with Irene Dunne, [...]
Posted by Timeea on Wednesday, February 23, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, People · Tagged A Passage to India, A Star is Born, A Streetcar Named Desire, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Actress, Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, academy awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, actress, Ada McGrath, Aileen Wuornos, Alex Forrest, Alice Aisgill, Amber Waves, America, American Film Institute, America’s cinema, Amy Jolly, Angela Lansbury, Anjelica Huston, Anna Christie, Anna Leonowens, Anna Magnani, Annie Wilkes, artist, audrey hepburn, BAFTA, Ball of Fire, Barbara Graham, Barbara Stanwyck, Bavaria, Belinda McDonald, bette davis, Bette Midler, Billy Kwan, Birdie Coonan, Birdman of Alcatraz, Boogie Nights, Brenda Fricker, Brigitte Bardot, Burt Lancaster, Catherine Sloper, Cathy Whitaker, charlize theron, Cinema of the United States, Daisy Werthan, Dangerous Liaisons, Deborah Kerr, dedicated actress, Donna Reed, Dorothy Gale, Double Indemnity, Easter Parade, Edie Doyle, Edward, Eleanor Parker, Elizabeth Kenny, Elizabeth Stroud, Ellen McNulty, Emmy, Empress, Entertainment_Culture, Eva Marie Saint, Eve Black, Eve White, Evelyn Boult, Famous film director, Far from Heaven, farmer, Film director, From Here to Eternity, Gable, Germany, Ginger Rogers, Glenn Close, Gloria Grahame, Golden Apple Award, Golden Globe, Golden Globes, Grace Kelly, Greer Garson, greta garbo, Harold Arlen, Heaven Knows, Helen Keller, Holly Hunter, Honorary Academy, Human Interest, hunter, Ida Carmody, India, Ingrid Bergman, Irene Dunne, Irene Hoffman Wallner, Iris Gaines, Isabelle de Merteuil, Jane Wyman, Jennifer Jones, Jenny Fields, Jerry Bernard Martin, Jessica Tandy, joan crawford, Joanne Woodward, Jodie Foster, Josef von Sternberg, Judgment at Nuremberg, Judi Dench, Judy Garland, Judy Holliday, julia roberts, Julianne Moore, Julie Marsden, Karen Holmes, Katharine Hepburn, Kathy Bates, Katrin Holstorm, King, Laura Brown, Lavinia Mannon, leading actress, Legendary actress, Leona Stevenson, Linda Hunt, Loretta Young, Love Field, Lulu Bains, Margaret Rutherford, Marguerite Gautier, Marie Dressler, Marilyn Monroe, Marlene Dietrich, Married to the Mob, Mass media, Meet Me in St. Louis, Meg Ryan, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mildred Pierce Beragon, Min Divot, Miracle on 34th Street, Miracle Worker, Missouri, Moe Williams, morocco, Mourning Becomes Electra, movie actress, Mr. Allison, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Miniver, My Sister Eileen, My Son, natalie wood, Nina Ivanovna 'Ninotchka' Yakushova, Ninotchka, Norma Shearer, Nuremberg, Olivia De Havilland, Oscar, oscars, Patty Duke, Peggy Ashcroft, Phyllis Dietrichson, popular supporting actress, queen, Renee Zellweger, Rita Cavallini, Rosalind Russel, Rosalind Russell, Ruby Thewes, Ruth Sherwood, Sarah Cooper, Sarah Miles, Sarah Tobias, Scarface, Screen Actors Guild, Screen Actors Guild awards, Shakespeare in Love, Shanghai Express, Shirley Jones, Short Cuts, Sibyl Railton-Bell, Simone Signoret, singer and producer, Sissy Spacek, sophia loren, St. Louis, Stella Kowalski, Stella Martin 'Stell' Dallas, supporting actress, Susan Hayward, Susie Diamond, Television in the United States, The Academy's Honorary Award, The Big Chill, The Devil is a Woman, The End of the Affair, The Fabulous Baker Boys, The Farmer's Daughter, The Hours, The Kids Are All Right, The King and I, The Song of Bernadette, The Three Faces of Eve, The Wizard of Oz, The World According to Garp, Thelma Ritter, Touch of Evil, United States, Vicki Lester, Whoopi Goldberg, With a Song in My Heart
Opera in the Movies The first known opera was produced in Italy way back in 1597. Since then there have been hundreds of incarnations of this form of musical theater. What distinguishes opera from other forms of theater is that it is wall-to-wall singing, usually in a non-English language. As a source of inspiration, opera [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, September 2, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, Music, Television · Tagged Actor, Alex Forrest, Allan Corduner, Amadeus, American Film Institute, Anne Archer, Antonio Salieri, Bill Kilgore, Bugs Bunny, characters, Charles Foster Kane, Charles Kane, Chuck Jones, Colonel, Dan Gallagher, Danny Aiello, Doc?, Don Giovanni, Dorothy Comingore, Elmer Fudd, Entertainment, Entertainment_Culture, F. Murray Abraham, film, Gerard Butler, Gilbert and Sullivan, Giuseppi Verdi, Glenn Close, glenn close fatal attraction, Italy, Johnny Cammareri, Juliet, Kevin Kline, Loretta, Margret Dumont, Mel Blanc, Michael Crawford, Michael Douglas, Moonstruck, Movies, mozart, Music, Musical films, Nicholas Cage, Opera, opera Ring Cycle, Operas, Orson Wells, Oscar, Puccini opera, Rabbit of Seville, Rex Smith, Richard Wagner, Rick Bitzelberger, Robert Duvall, Romeo, Ronny Cammareri, Sarah Brightman, Seville, Spain, Susan Alexander, Take Me Out to the Ballgame, The Magic Flute, The Phantom of the Opera, The Pirates of Penzance, The Ride of the Valkyries, top 10, top 10 movie characters, TopTenz, west side story, What's Opera, would-be manager