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News: Pubs and theatre. An age-old pairing.
This exciting project will no doubt resonate with anyone that has ever stepped into a pub, so this February, grab your pint of Drunken Nights and witness something completely original and unique.
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News: The 28 Day Project launches wonderful opportunities
The 28 Day Project is an exciting initiative offering emerging talent a step into the film business.
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Have you got the Star Wars X Factor?
Thousands turned away at open auditions after standing in the rain for hours.
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News: TheatreCraft returns to help young people’s backstage careers
The 8th annual event returns to the Royal Opera House later this month.
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BLOG: Theatre: the best casino shows around the world
Casinos around the world offer some of the best theatrical entertainment you can find.
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BLOG: 5 Best Actors in Superhero Cinema
Is “superhero” acting any less challenging?
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Blog: Films to study for inspiration
Watching great actors can often inform your own work.
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Blog: Shakespeare experimenting with the limits of contemporary drama
Briony Rawle heads to Yorkshire and takes a closer look at Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.
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Review: Bat Boy, Southwark Playhouse ✭✭✭
A campy fun musical with bite screams Douglas Mayo.
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Review: Visitors, Arcola Theatre ✭✭✭✭
Barney Norris first full-length play is an exquisitely written examination of love and loss, writes Alex Delaney.
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Review: 1984, Almeida Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
This fresh vision of 1984 feels like a rediscovery of Orwell’s dystopia, writes Sophia Longhi.
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Review: Secret Theatre - Show 4, Lyric Hammersmith ✭✭✭✭
This review comes with a capitalised, emboldened and even italicised, SPOILER ALERT. That should do, writes Briony Rawle.
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Dame Elizabeth Taylor - the last of the old Hollywood legends
“When people say, ‘She’s got everything’, I’ve got one answer - I haven’t had tomorrow…” Dame Elizabeth Taylor dies aged 79.
Add a commentShe’s the Dame, they say, who had everything. “I haven’t had tomorrow” she would retort. Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor dies aged 79.
Taylor was arguably one of our most loved and finest Hollywood movie stars. A double Oscar winner, her most notable films included National Velvet, Cleopatra and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
The first thing I saw was an engagement ring. I was hooked.
Taylor lived an intriguing life to the full, and continued stunning the world when she married husband after husband – seven in total, including tying the knock with Welsh actor Richard Burton - twice. Taylor famously said of marriage: “My mother says I didn’t open my eyes for eight days after I was born, but when I did, the first thing I saw was an engagement ring. I was hooked.”
Between 1958 and 1961, the English-American actress notched up four Oscar nominations in a row, and finally won with Butterfield 8 (1960). Her second Oscar win came in 1967 with Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? She starred in the picture with Burton, one of twelve films with her husband.
Taylor was a huge campaigner for HIV and AIDS, setting up her own charity in the early nineties after her friend Rock Hudson died.
Taylor once said: “I hope with all of my heart that in some way I have made a difference in the lives of people with AIDS. I want that to be my legacy. Better that than for the mole on my cheek.”Her four children were at her bedside at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles when she died this morning. The Dame had an extensive history of ill health.
Published on March 23, 2011 · Filed under: Featured, News; Tagged as: Actress, Elizabeth Taylor, Hollywood, Richard Burton







