International opera star Renee Fleming and Emmy Award nominee Tituss Burgess performed together for the first time, for an audience that includes opera stars Joyce Didonato, Paul Appleby and Diana Soviero, Ann Ziff, Margie Loeb, Miriam Morales 'Orange Is The New Black', poker star Beth Shak, Nobel Laureates Dr. Muhammad Yunus and Dr. James Watson, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Mercedes Bass, Dave Gilboa Warby Parker, Angela Birchett The Color Purple, Grammy nominee Emily King, and more at Sing for Hope's 10th Anniversary Gala this Monday at Tribeca Rooftop. BroadwayWorld has photos from the performance and the gala below...
- 10/28/2016
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
International opera star Renee Fleming and Emmy Award nominee Tituss Burgess performed together for the first time, for an audience that includes opera stars Joyce Didonato, Paul Appleby and Diana Soviero, Ann Ziff, Margie Loeb, Miriam Morales 'Orange Is The New Black', poker star Beth Shak, Nobel Laureates Dr. Muhammad Yunus and Dr. James Watson, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Mercedes Bass, Dave Gilboa Warby Parker, Angela Birchett The Color Purple, Grammy nominee Emily King, and more atSing for Hope's 10th Anniversary Gala this Monday atTribeca Rooftop. Scroll down for photos of the stars arriving for the event...
- 10/28/2016
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Falling Skies’ second season has only just come to an end, but already we are looking forward to the future, with casting announcements for Season 3 already creeping on to the Internet. I can’t remember the last time casting had begun so quickly in between seasons of a television show. I can only think that, due to Falling Skies extensive postproduction needs, things have to get rolling pretty early on. But it’s not like the writers and actors haven’t already had a big break. The entirety of Season 2 was filmed before it aired, so for the last nine weeks, everyone has been enjoying some much deserved time off. But now it’s time to breakdown Season 3 and reveal who will be playing whom.
As reported by Deadline, former House star Robert Sean Leonard has found his first post-House gig as Roger Kadar, PhD. An obsessive, yet gifted, scientist,...
As reported by Deadline, former House star Robert Sean Leonard has found his first post-House gig as Roger Kadar, PhD. An obsessive, yet gifted, scientist,...
- 8/25/2012
- by Brody Gibson
- Boomtron
M&C has added production stills from Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows - now on DVD and Blu-ray. (L-r) Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes and Jude Law as Dr. James Watson in Warner Bros. Pictures' and Village Roadshow Pictures' action adventure mystery "Sherlock Holmes: A Game Of Shadows," a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo by Daniel Smith (L-r) Jude Law as Dr. James Watson and Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes in Warner Bros. Pictures' and Village Roadshow Pictures' action adventure mystery "Sherlock Holmes: A Game Of Shadows," a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo by Daniel Smith (L-r) Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes, Jude Law as Dr. James Watson and Kelly Reilly as Mary Watson in...
- 6/12/2012
- by Patrick Luce
- Monsters and Critics
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Robert Downey Jr., left, as Sherlock Holmes and Jude Law as Dr. James Watson in “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows.”
The holiday season is starting off less than merrily for Hollywood.
Following its lowest-grossing weekend of the year last week, this weekend’s new wide-release franchise films failed to match what their previous installments earned, continuing a domestic box office slump.
“Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows,” from Time Warner Inc.’s Warner Bros. Pictures...
The holiday season is starting off less than merrily for Hollywood.
Following its lowest-grossing weekend of the year last week, this weekend’s new wide-release franchise films failed to match what their previous installments earned, continuing a domestic box office slump.
“Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows,” from Time Warner Inc.’s Warner Bros. Pictures...
- 12/18/2011
- by Michelle Kung
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
The second half of series three of Sci-fi hit Sanctuary roars back exclusively onto Watch each Tuesday at 9pm (yes airs tonight – in just over Two hours), with more monsters and explosive action.
Featuring Stargate‘s Amanda Tapping as 158-year-old Dr Helen Magnus, head of a secret group of some of the 19th century’s most experimental minds (including Nikola Tesla and Dr James Watson) who has crossed the boundaries of time to patrol the streets, she offers help and sanctuary to monsters and beasts that are found on the streets and in dark corners, and aren’t accepted by human society. Along with her own century-and-a-half’s worth of experience, Magnus has gathered around her an expert team of ‘abnormal’ hunters – there’s reluctant protégé Will, her reckless daughter Ashley, geeky Henry and a taciturn Neanderthal-like abnormal they call Big Guy.
Sanctuary airs at 9pm tonight on Watch (Sky...
Featuring Stargate‘s Amanda Tapping as 158-year-old Dr Helen Magnus, head of a secret group of some of the 19th century’s most experimental minds (including Nikola Tesla and Dr James Watson) who has crossed the boundaries of time to patrol the streets, she offers help and sanctuary to monsters and beasts that are found on the streets and in dark corners, and aren’t accepted by human society. Along with her own century-and-a-half’s worth of experience, Magnus has gathered around her an expert team of ‘abnormal’ hunters – there’s reluctant protégé Will, her reckless daughter Ashley, geeky Henry and a taciturn Neanderthal-like abnormal they call Big Guy.
Sanctuary airs at 9pm tonight on Watch (Sky...
- 6/14/2011
- by Phil
- Nerdly
David Fincher captures the spiteful personalities and hyperactive spirit of the age with the story of Facebook's creation, writes Peter Bradshaw
From the first sentence, the first word, the first nervily in-drawn breath, this compulsively watchable picture announces itself as the unmistakable work of Aaron Sorkin. His whip-smart, mile-a-minute dialogue made The West Wing deeply addictive on TV, and after uncertain works such as Charlie Wilson's War and the strange, small-screen drama Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip – in which Sorkin's distinctive, faintly martyred seriousness was bafflingly applied to the backstage shenanigans of a fictional television comedy – this writer is triumphantly back on form. He's found an almost perfect subject: the creation of the networking website Facebook, and the backstabbing legal row among the various nerds, geeks, brainiacs and maniacs about who gets the credit and the cash.
Part boardroom drama, part conspiracy thriller, the story is adapted from Ben Mezrich...
From the first sentence, the first word, the first nervily in-drawn breath, this compulsively watchable picture announces itself as the unmistakable work of Aaron Sorkin. His whip-smart, mile-a-minute dialogue made The West Wing deeply addictive on TV, and after uncertain works such as Charlie Wilson's War and the strange, small-screen drama Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip – in which Sorkin's distinctive, faintly martyred seriousness was bafflingly applied to the backstage shenanigans of a fictional television comedy – this writer is triumphantly back on form. He's found an almost perfect subject: the creation of the networking website Facebook, and the backstabbing legal row among the various nerds, geeks, brainiacs and maniacs about who gets the credit and the cash.
Part boardroom drama, part conspiracy thriller, the story is adapted from Ben Mezrich...
- 10/15/2010
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
And here we go again…
The story, if you haven’t already heard it, goes… a white, third year law student at Harvard Law School wrote an e-mail to friends about race and intelligence that was forwarded around aplenty, and eventually made its way to several Black Law Student Associations at other colleges and universities, as well as a popular legal blog called Above the Law, late last week. In short, the student’s email argued “the possibility that African Americans are, on average, genetically predisposed to be less intelligent” than whites.
Naturally, the blogosphere has been all abuzz with discussion ranging from attempts to prove or debunk the student’s argument, to impassioned exchanges on the dangers in and motives for introducing this kind of discourse, to the student’s right to make the argument, to the students right to privacy, and more.
A Shadow And Act reader sent...
The story, if you haven’t already heard it, goes… a white, third year law student at Harvard Law School wrote an e-mail to friends about race and intelligence that was forwarded around aplenty, and eventually made its way to several Black Law Student Associations at other colleges and universities, as well as a popular legal blog called Above the Law, late last week. In short, the student’s email argued “the possibility that African Americans are, on average, genetically predisposed to be less intelligent” than whites.
Naturally, the blogosphere has been all abuzz with discussion ranging from attempts to prove or debunk the student’s argument, to impassioned exchanges on the dangers in and motives for introducing this kind of discourse, to the student’s right to make the argument, to the students right to privacy, and more.
A Shadow And Act reader sent...
- 5/3/2010
- by Tambay
- ShadowAndAct
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