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omegaplus · 2 years
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Paul Simon: One-Trick Pony (1979)
This is the only Paul Simon record I’ll ever own and here’s six reasons why: John Tropea, Dave Grusin, Richard Tee, Eric Gale, Steve Gadd, and Ralph MacDonald. They represent a curious era I’m still getting to know and their sounds perfectly define what I think of it. Those musicians are why I discovered Simon’s soundtrack-album as some of them perform and even star in it along with The B-52′s, Lou Reed, Tiny Tim (!) and more. So when WUSB’s Joi (Hygge) discussed it on-air with her father, I knew I had to have it. (Update: I acquired it at Patchogue’s Record Stop.) What’s wild is someone at my station who’s half my age knows and appreciates Seventies jazz / fusion like I do. I’m already familiar with Tropea, Gale, and Grusin’s work (and partially Gadd) and the soul of One-Trick Pony lines up with how I personally see and feel about the Seventies, so there’ll be no dispute about me enjoying this on Simon album. Now, I’m on the lookout for the motion picture.
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machetelanding · 2 years
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poniatowskaja · 1 year
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It was with confidence, then, that Ralph Eure and his colleagues carried out their campaign of destruction into 1545; in the apparently supine state of the country it was easy work, and Eure had the incentive of a guarantee from his king that he could have whatever land he conquered in Teviotdale and the East March. Angus, when he heard of this, observed grimly that he personally would be prepared to witness the title deeds, with a sharp pen and in red ink. In the meantime, he intended to take care of those Scottish Borderers who were lending assistance to England. He set out south in February 1545 to read a lesson to the Crosers, Nixons and their fellows, and especially to the Teviotdale renegades. Eure, seeing his Scottish reiver allies in danger, hurried over the Border to protect them; he led a force of 3000 riders, which seemed ample, since Angus (and Arran, who accompanied him) had a bare 300 lances, which he brought to Melrose. Eure, lying at Jedburgh, made a night foray against him, but the wily Angus and his riders were off into the hills, and stayed there, scouting Eure’s fore as it plundered round Melrose and then retired. Eure, confident in his strength, mopped up the tower of Broomhouse, where an old lady and her family are said to have been burned alive, while Angus, now reinforced by Scott of Buccleuch’s riders and a detachment of Fife cavalry, hung at his heels and waited. Whatever his personal defects, Angus was second to none in the rough-and-tumble of Border warfare; he was in effect conducting a large-scale hot trod in his own way, and he waited until Eure was where he wanted him, on the moor just north of Ancrum a bare five miles from Jedburgh. Skilfully he outflanked Eure’s line of march, dismounted his riders, and waited for the English force to reach him. Using the ground, on Buccleuch’s advice, he managed to conceal the full size of his little army, and Eure’s mixed battalions of English and Scottish Borderers hurried on to get to grips; they were tired and heavy with plunder, and when they ran into Angus’s ambush, with the setting sun and the smoke of their own gunfire hitting them full in the face, Eure realised his mistake. His charge was turned into a shambles as it met the Scottish lances, and as his force fell back in disorder he learned the bitterest lesson of all – the unwisdom of trusting Border reivers. His Scottish riders, who could read the course of a battle as well as Eure himself, tore off their red crosses and turned on their English allies; caught before the solid mass of Angus’s men and with treachery in his midst, Eure could only sell his life as dearly as possible, for he did not expect quarter. He and Laiton died fighting in the press, and his followers were cut down in hundreds; at least a thousand are said to have been taken prisoner, including a London alderman named Read who had been sent to fight the Scots as punishment for failing to pay a levy demanded by King Henry; in the long run his ransom cost him more than the levy would have done. When it was over, Arran walked among the corpses, and was shown Eure’s body. He looked down at the dead man, whose prowess as a fighting soldier had been unsurpassed, and whose savagery had made him the most hated rider in the Border country. “God have mercy on him,��� said Arran, “for he was a fell cruel man.” Then he wept for the dead. Angus asked him was he merry, and Arran replied: “My lord, I am much the merrier for you,” embraced Angus, and apologised for ever mistrusting him. Ancrum Moor was not a big battle, but it had an importance beyond its size. It received much publicity in France, and many months later an English resident there reported that, hearing the French rejoicing over some apparently new victory by the Scots against the English, he had investigated and discovered that it was just the story of Ancrum Moor being retold yet again.
George MacDonald Fraser, The Steel Bonnets: The Story of the Anglo-Scottish Border Reivers, 260-261
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quiltofstars · 1 month
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M91 // Ralph MacDonald
A barred spiral galaxy, M91 is the faintest object in the Messier catalog and the last group of eight galaxies that Messier discovered in 1781.
This was also a "lost" object for nearly two centuries. Messier made a mistake in logging his observations, writing this galaxies position with respect to M58 instead of M89. Although William Herschel (1738-1822) suspected this mistake in 1784, he was unsure. It took amateur astronomer William C. Williams in 1969 to recover this "lost" galaxy!
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demifiendrsa · 1 year
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Critics Choice Awards 2023 winners:
Best Picture: Everything Everywhere All at Once
Best Actress: Cate Blanchett, Tár
Best Actor: Brendan Fraser, The Whale
Best Director: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Best Limited Series: The Dropout
Best Drama Series: Better Call Saul
Best Actress in a Drama Series: Zendaya, Euphoria
Best Actor in a Drama Series: Bob Odenkirk, Better Call Saul
Best Comedy Series: Abbott Elementary
Best Actress in a Comedy Series: Jean Smart, Hacks
Best Actor in a Comedy Series: Jeremy Allen White, The Bear
Best Animated Feature: Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Best Actor in a Limited Series or TV Movie: Daniel Radcliffe, Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
Best Supporting Actress: Angela Bassett, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Best Supporting Actor: Ke Huy Quan, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series: Sheryl Lee Ralph, Abbott Elementary
Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series: Henry Winkler, Barry
Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie: Niecy Nash-Betts, Dahmer - Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story
Best Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or TV Movie: Paul Walter Hauser, Black Bird
Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series: Jennifer Coolidge, The White Lotus
Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series: Giancarlo Esposito, Better Call Saul
Best Foreign Language Film: RRR (India)
Best Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie: Amanda Seyfried, The Dropout
Best Young Actor/Actress: Gabriel LaBelle, The Fabelmans
Best Comedy: Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
Best Acting Ensemble: Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
Best Talk Show: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
Best Comedy Special: Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special
Best Foreign Language Series: Pachinko
Best Animated Series: Harley Quinn
Best Movie Made for Television: Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
Best Hair and Makeup: Elvis
Best Visual Effects: Avatar: The Way of Water
Best Editing: Paul Rogers, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Best Production Design: Florencia Martin, Babylon
Best Cinematography: Claudio Miranda, Top Gun: Maverick
Best Costume Design: Ruth E. Carter, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
Best Song: “Naatu Naatu”, RRR
Best Score: Hildur Guðnadóttir, Tár
Best Adapted Screenplay: Sarah Polley, Women Talking
Best Original Screenplay: Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Lifetime Achievement Award: Jeff Bridges
#SeeHer Award: Janelle Monáe
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0rph3u5 · 5 months
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What's Going On · Herbie Mann
Drums: Bernard Purdie Bass  Guitar: Chuck Rainey Guitar: Cornell Dupree Guitar: Duane Allman Harp: Gene Bianca Flute: Herbie Mann Percussion: Ralph MacDonald Organ, Piano: Richard Tee Composer: Alfred Cleveland Composer: Marvin Gaye Composer: Renaldo Benson
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projazznet · 5 hours
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Hank Crawford – Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing
Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing is a soul-jazz album by saxophonist Hank Crawford, released in 1975 on Kudu Records. Hank Crawford – alto sax Jerry Dodgion – flute, tenor sax Joe Farrell – flute, tenor sax Pepper Adams – baritone sax Romeo Penque – baritone sax Jon Faddis – trumpet, flugelhorn Randy Brecker – trumpet, flugelhorn Alan Rubin – trumpet, flugelhorn Hugh McCracken – guitar Richard Tee – keyboards Bob James – keyboards, arranger, conductor Ron Carter – bass Gary King – bass Bernard Purdie – drums Idris Muhammad – drums Ralph MacDonald – percussion
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scotianostra · 7 months
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The Poet and author George MacDonald died on September 18th 1905.
George MacDonald might not be a name you are familiar with, but he was friends and was admired by some of the 19th century’s most famous writers, as seen in the group pic.
After being raised in Huntley, Aberdeenshire, by devout Calvinist parents, he attended King's College in Aberdeen. At Highbury Theological College, he received his divinity degree, and in 1850 he became a pastor of a Congregational church in Arundel. Early the following year, he married Louisa Powell, with whom he enjoyed a long and happy marriage.
McDonald was forced to resign his pulpit in 1853 because he liked to dabble in "German theology," meaning the new higher critical approach to biblical studies emerging from that country. He never took another church but spent the rest of his life lecturing, preaching, and especially writing.
Between 1851 and 1897, he wrote over 50 books in all manner of genre: novels, plays, essays, sermons, poems, and fairy tales. And then there were his two fantasies for adults, Phantastes and Lilith. During these years, Lewis Carroll became a good friend and gave him the first manuscript of Alice in Wonderland to read to his children. Other British literary luminaries—like John Ruskin, Charles Kingsley, Lord Tennyson, and Matthew Arnold—were among his associates and admirers.
When McDonald visited the United States in 1872 for a lecture tour, the likes of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Mark Twain paid him homage. After his stay in New York City, one large Fifth Avenue church offered him the almost unheard of salary of $20,000 a year to become its pastor. MacDonald thought the idea preposterous.
His success did not exempt him from more-than-ordinary suffering. Poverty plagued him so much that his family occasionally faced literal starvation. His own lungs were diseased, and tuberculosis killed two brothers and two half-sisters. It also ravaged his children, four of whom died before him. He himself had a stroke at age 74 and lapsed into virtual silence for the last seven years of his life.
C.S. Lewis who wrote that he regarded MacDonald as his "master": "Picking up a copy of Phantastes one day at a train-station bookstall, I began to read. A few hours later," said Lewis, "I knew that I had crossed a great frontier” G K Chesterton cited The Princess and the Goblin as a book that had "made a difference to my whole existence."
Looking through George McDonalds poems I found amongst them two very famous one, Little Boy Blue, and Little Bo Peep. Now am not sure if he first created them, but just to see these was an eye opener. Most of his verse is religious, but I found one I really like in the Scots Tongue.
ANE BY ANE.
Ane by ane they gang awa’,
The Getherer gethers grit an smaa;
Ane by ane maks ane an aa.
Aye whan ane sets doun the cup
Ane ahint maun tak it up:
Yet thegither thy will sup!
Goulden-heidit, ripe an strang,
Shorn will be the hairst or lang:
Syne begins a better sang!
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kwebtv · 3 days
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Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years - ITV - September 6, 1981 - October 25, 1981
Drama (8 Episodes)
Running Time: 60 minutes
Stars:
Robert Hardy as Winston Churchill
Siân Phillips as Clementine Churchill
Nigel Havers as Randolph Churchill
Tim Pigott-Smith as Brendan Bracken
David Swift as Professor Lindemann
Sherrie Hewson as Mrs. Pearman
Moray Watson as Major Desmond Morton
Paul Freeman as Ralph Wigram
Frank Middlemass as Lord Derby
Sam Wanamaker as Bernard Baruch
Peter Barkworth as Stanley Baldwin
Eric Porter as Neville Chamberlain
Edward Woodward as Sir Samuel Hoare
Peter Vaughan as Sir Thomas Inskip
Robert James as Ramsay MacDonald
Tony Mathews as Anthony Eden
Ian Collier as Harold Macmillan
Marcella Markham as Nancy Astor
Walter Gotell as Lord Swinton
Richard Murdoch as Lord Halifax
Clive Swift as Sir Horace Wilson
Phil Brown as Lord Beaverbrook
Diane Fletcher as Ava Wigram
Geoffrey Toone as Sir Louis Kershaw
Norman Jones as Clement Attlee
Geoffrey Chater as Lord Hailsham
Stratford Johns as Lord Rothermere
Norman Bird as Sir Maurice Hankey
Roger Bizley as Ernst Hanfstaengl
James Cossins as Lord Lothian
Guy Deghy as King George V
Stephen Elliott as William Randolph Hearst
Günter Meisner as Adolf Hitler
Frederick Jaeger as Joachim von Ribbentrop
David Langton as Lord Londonderry
Preston Lockwood as Austen Chamberlain
David Markham as the Duke of Marlborough
Richard Marner as Ewald von Kleist-Schmenzin
Llewellyn Rees as Lord Salisbury
Terence Rigby as Thomas Barlow
Margaret Courtenay as Maxine Elliott
Merrie Lynn Ross as Marion Davies
Nigel Stock as Admiral Domvile
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docrotten · 3 months
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GREMLINS (1984) – Episode 250 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
“Ai-yah. You teach him to watch TV?” Do you mean there was a fourth rule? Join your faithful Grue Crew – Chad Hunt, Bill Mulligan, Crystal Cleveland, and Jeff Mohr, along with guest host Ralph Miller – as they take an effects-focused dive into Joe Dante’s Gremlins (1984).
Decades of Horror 1980s Episode 250 – Gremlins (1984)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! Click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
Decades of Horror 1980s is partnering with the WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL (https://wickedhorrortv.com/) which now includes video episodes of 1980s and is available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, and its online website across all OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop.
A young man inadvertently breaks three important rules concerning his new pet and unleashes a horde of malevolently mischievous monsters on a small town.
  Director: Joe Dante
Writer: Chris Columbus
Produced by:
Michael Finnell (producer) (produced by)
Kathleen Kennedy (executive producer)
Frank Marshall (executive producer)
Steven Spielberg (executive producer)
Music by: Jerry Goldsmith
Cinematography by: John Hora (director of photography)
Editing by: Tina Hirsch
Casting By: Susan Arnold
Production Design by: James H. Spencer
Special Effects:
Chris Walas (creator: Gremlins) 
Bob MacDonald Jr. (special effects foreman)
R.A. MacDonald (special effects supervisor) (as Bob MacDonald Sr.)
Selected Cast:
Hoyt Axton as Randall Peltzer
John Louie as Chinese Boy
Keye Luke as Grandfather
Don Steele as Rockin’ Ricky Rialto (voice)
Susan Burgess as Little Girl
Scott Brady as Sheriff Frank
Arnie Moore as Pete’s Father
Corey Feldman as Pete
Harry Carey Jr. as Mr. Anderson
Zach Galligan as Billy
Dick Miller as Mr. Futterman
Phoebe Cates as Kate
Polly Holliday as Mrs. Deagle
Belinda Balaski as Mrs. Harris
Edward Andrews as Mr. Corben
Judge Reinhold as Gerald Hopkins
Chuck Jones as Mr. Jones
Glynn Turman as Roy Hanson
Tracy Wells as Schoolchild
Jonathan Banks as Deputy Brent
Frank Welker as Stripe / Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Howie Mandel as Gizmo (voice)
Fred Newman as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Mark Dodson as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Michael Winslow as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Peter Cullen as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Bob Bergen as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice) (as Bob Berger)
Michael Sheehan as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice) (as Mike Sheehan)
Bob Holt as Mogwai / Gremlins (voice)
Richard Carlson as Dr. Research (archive footage) (uncredited)
Jerry Goldsmith as Man in Telephone Booth Glancing at Camera (uncredited)
William Schallert as Father Bartlett (uncredited)
Steven Spielberg as Man in Electric Wheelchair (uncredited)
Kenneth Tobey as Mobil Gas Station Attendant (uncredited)
Effects artist Ralph Miller joins the Grue-Crew to add his experience working on Gremlin’s creature crew, led by Chris Walas, the designer of Mogwai and the gremlins. Though the crew focuses on the film’s effects, they also delve into the cast, cameos, crew, and behind-the-scenes stories. 
In July 2014, Doc Rotten and Thomas Mariani covered Gremlins before the Monster Movie Podcast became Decades of Horror 1980s. Check it what they had to say at this link: 
Monster Movie Podcast Episode 68 – Gremlins 1984
As of 21 January 2024, Gremlins is available for streaming from many PPV sites and on physical media in 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray formats. 
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Jeff, will be Slaughterhouse (1987). They may need a shower after this one.
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans – so leave them a message or comment on the Gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the Gruesome Magazine website, or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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derekfoxwit · 1 year
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The Best Picture Oscar My Way (1980-1999)
Here’s Part 2 of Best Picture My Way (as started here). All information about my approach with this category can be found on that linked first part.
For convenience sake, I’ll relay this message. Only the films I add onto here as nominees will have listed nominated producers next to the movie’s title. (Here’s the Wikipedia page for the rest.)
1980
The Empire Strikes Back - Gary Kurtz
Raging Bull
The Elephant Man
Coal Miner’s Daughter
Ordinary People
1981
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Das Boot - Gunter Rohrbach; Michael Bittins
Reds
On the Golden Pond
Chariots of Fire
1982
Tootsie
E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
Fitzcarraldo - Werner Herzog; Willi Segler; Lucki Stipetic
Missing
Gandhi
1983
Fanny and Alexander - Jorn Donner
Terms of Endearment
Scarface - Martin Bregman
Mender Mercies
The Right Stuff
1984
Amadeus (still)
The Terminator - Gale Anne Hurd
Love Streams - Yoram Globus; Menahem Golan
Ghostbusters - Ivan Reitman
A Passage to India
1985
Back to the Future - Neil Canton; Bob Gale
The Color Purple
After Hours - Robert F. Colesberry; Griffin Dunne; Amy Robinson
Ran - Masato Hara; Serge Silberman
Witness
1986
Platoon (still)
Misery - Rob Reiner; Andrew Scheinman
Hannah and Her Sisters
A Room with a View
Blue Velvet - Fred C. Caruso
1987
The Last Emperor (still)
The Princess Bride - Rob Reiner; Andrew Scheinman
Broadcast News
Moonstruck
Fatal Attraction
1988
Who Framed Roger Rabbit - Frank Marshall; Robert Watts
Rain Man
Dangerous Liaisons
Mississippi Burning
The Last Temptation of Christ - Barbara De Fina
1989
Do The Right Thing - Spike Lee
Driving Miss Daisy
Dead Poets Society
My Left Foot
Cinema Paradiso - Giovanna Romagnoli
1990
Goodfellas
Dances with Wolves
Edward Scissorhands - Tim Burton; Denise Di Novi
Ghost
The Godfather Part III
1991
The Silence of the Lambs (still)
Thelma & Louise - Ridley Scott
Beauty and the Beast
Boyz in the Hood - Steve Nicolaides
JFK
1992
Unforgiven (still)
A Few Good Men
Malcolm X - Spike Lee; Marvin Worth
Reservoir Dogs - Lawrence Bender; Harvey Keitel
Aladdin - Ron Clements; John Musker
1993
Schindler’s List (still)
The Piano
Philadelphia - Jonathan Demme; Edward Saxon
In The Name of the Father
The Fugitive
1994
The Lion King - Don Hahn
Forrest Gump
Pulp Fiction
The Shawshank Redemption
Eat Drink Man Woman - Kong Hsu; Li-Kong Hsu
1995
Toy Story - Bonnie Arnold; Ralph Guggenheim
Se7en - Phyllis Carlyle; Arnold Kopelson
The Postman (Il Postino)
Before Sunrise - Anne Walker-McBay
Braveheart
1996
Fargo
Trainspotting - Andrew Macdonald
Secrets & Lies
Jerry Maguire
The English Patient
1997
Titanic (still)
Good Will Hunting
L.A. Confidential
Princess Mononoke - Toshio Suzuki
Boogie Nights - Paul Thomas Anderson; Lloyd Levin; John S. Lyons; JoAnne Sellar
Lost Highway - Deepak Nayar; Tom Sternberg; Mary Sweeney
As Good as It Gets
The Full Monty
1998
Saving Private Ryan
Life is Beautiful
The Thin Red Line
The Big Lebowski - Joel and Ethan Coen
Mulan - Pam Coats
Central Station - Arthur Cohn; Martine de Clermont-Tonnerre; Robert Redford; Walter Salles
The Truman Show - Edward S. Feldman; Andrew Niccol; Scott Rudin; Adam Schroeder
Rushmore - Barry Mendel; Paul Schiff
Shakespeare in Love
1999
The Matrix - Joel Silver
American Beauty
The Green Mile
The Sixth Sense
Magnolia - Paul Thomas Anderson; JoAnne Sellar
The Straight Story - Neal Edelstein; Mary Sweeney
Man on the Moon - Danny DeVito; Michael Shamberg; Stacey Sher
Being John Malkovich - Steve Golin; Vincent Landay; Sandy Stern; Michael Stipe
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dear-indies · 8 months
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Hi Cat! I hope you had a nice weekend. Could you please help me with faceclaims I’ve been struggling with? I’m trying to think of actors and actresses that could fit both the screwball comedy and the noir aesthetic of movies from the 30s/40s. Thank you so much!
Non-binary:
Sara Ramirez (1975) Mexican, some Irish - is non-binary (they/them) - Madam Secretary.
Janelle Monáe (1985) African-American - is non-binary (she/they) and is pansexual - Glass Onion, Hidden Figures.
Women:
Anna Chancellor (1965) - The Hour.
Miranda Otto (1967) - Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.
Queen Latifah (1970) African-American - is openly dating a woman but hasn't publicly labelled her sexuality - Bessie.
Luisa Ranieri (1973) - 7 Women and a Murder.
Christina Hendricks (1975) - Mad Men.
Ruby Lin (1976) Chinese - Phantom of the Theatre.
Ginnifer Goodwin (1978) Ashkenazi Jewish / English, some Welsh, distant German - Why Women Kill.
Kelly Macdonald (1976) - Swallows and Amazons.
Juliet Rylance (1979) - Perry Mason.
April Bowlby (1980) - Doom Patrol.
Zhang Jing Chu (1980) Taiwanese - For a Few Bullets.
Allison Tolman (1981) - Why Women Kill.
Kate Siegel (1982) Russian Jewish, Moldovan Jewish, Polish Jewish, German Jewish - is bisexual.
Ruth Wilson (1982) - His Dark Materials.
Natalie Dormer (1982) - Penny Dreadful.
Emily Blunt (1983) - Mary Poppins.
Kerry Bishé (1984) - Penny Dreadful.
Andra Day (1984) African-American - The United States vs. Billie Holiday.
Nathalie Kelley (1985) Argentinian, Peruvian [Quechua, possibly other]
Chasten Harmon (1985) African-American - Damnation.
May Calamawy (1986) Jordanian, Palestinian / Egyptian.
Janet Montgomery (1986) - Dancing on the Edge.
Natasha O'Keeffe (1986) - Peaky Blinders.
Rachel Shenton (1987) - All Creatures Great and Small.
Evan Rachel Wood (1987) - is bisexual.
B.K. Cannon (1990) - Why Women Kill.
Julia Garner (1994) Ashkenazi Jewish / English, Cornish, Scottish, Irish, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish.
Anya Taylor-Joy (1996) - Peaky Blinders.
Sadie Calvano (1997) - Why Women Kill.
Benedetta Porcaroli (1998) - 7 Women and a Murder.
Men:
Burn Gorman (1974)
Chiwetel Ejiofor (1977) Igbo Nigerian - Dancing on the Edge.
Matthew Goode (1978) - Dancing on the Edge.
Oscar Isaac (1979) Cuban-Guatemalan-Spanish - W.E.
Vinny Chhibber (1980) Indian.
Ben Barnes (1981)
Fawad Khan (1981) Pakistani.
Utkarsh Ambudkar (1983) Marathi / Tamil.
Oliver Jackson-Cohen (1986) Egyptian Jewish / English - The Haunting of Bly Manor.
Nikesh Patel (1986) Indian - Indian Summers.
Hale Appleman (1986) Ashkenazi Jewish / Irish, English - is queer.
Ludi Lin (1987) Chinese.
Nicholas Ralph (1990) - All Creatures Great and Small.
Dominic Sherwood (1990) - Penny Dreadful.
Jacob Anderson (1990) Afro-Caribbean, English - Interview with the Vampire.
Daniel Zovatto (1991) Costa Rican - Penny Dreadful.
Freddy Carter (1992) - Shadow and Bone.
Jeremy Pope (1992) African-American - is gay - Hollywood.
David Corenswet (1993) Ashkenazi Jewish / English, Irish - Hollywood.
Anirudh Pisharody (1994) Indian.
Eli Goree (1994) Black Canadian.
Jonah Hauer-King (1995) Ashkenazi Jewish / English.
Hey! I'm not that helpful when it comes to time era asks but I hope you find some suggestions useful!
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prettyprettystuff · 8 years
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richie beras
rila fukushima
roberto cavalli
rodarte
romona keveza
saiid kobeisy
sandra mansour
sara naqvi
schiaparelli
self-portrait
shoes
stella de libero
stephane rolland
swarovski
tadashi shoji
temperley london
teuta matoshi duriqi
thierry mugler
tommy hilfiger
tony chaaya
tony ward
ulyana sergeenko
valentin yudashkin
valentino
veloudakis
versace
victoria's secret
vivetta
yumi katsura
zac posen
ziad nakad
zuhair murad
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globefan · 2 years
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George Fouracres as Stefano Ferdy Roberts as Prospero and Rachel Hannah Clarke as Ariel Peter Bourke as Gonzalo Ciarán O'Brien as Caliban Ferdy Roberts as Prospero Ralph Davis as Trinculo, George Fouracres as Stefano and Ciarán O'Brien as Caliban
Tempest pics, part 2 , (c) Marc Brenner
Creatives Assistant Director: Naeem Hayat Casting: Becky Paris Co Director: Diane Page Composer: Cassie Kinoshi Costume Supervisor: Jackie Orton Design Associate: Sandra Falase Designer: Paul Wills Director: Sean Holmes Dramaturg: Zoë Svendsen Globe Associate - Movement: Glynn MacDonald Movement Director: Rachael Nanyonjo Text Associate: Christine Schmidle Voice Associate: Tess Dignan
Musicians Musical Director / Double Bass: Rio Kai Percussion: Magnus Mehta Guitar: Shirley Tetteh Recorder: Olivia Petryszak Cello: Midori Jaeger
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quiltofstars · 2 years
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IC 2169 // Ralph MacDonald
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