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citizenscreen · 2 months
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At the 49th Academy Awards today in 1977, Eletha Finch accepts the Best Actor Oscar for her late husband, Peter Finch, for his portrayal of Howard Beale in Lumet’s NETWORK.
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forever70s · 1 year
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Peter Finch with his wife, Eletha (1973)
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petersonreviews · 7 years
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Sylvester Stallone, Eletha Finch, and Faye Dunaway with their Oscars at the 1977 Academy Awards
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loveless422 · 7 years
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Peter Finch posthumously won the Best Actor Oscar for Network (1976). The award was accepted by his widow, Eletha Barret.
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londontheatre · 7 years
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The Dog Beneath the Skin, Credit Visual Things.
Jermyn Street Theatre’s dynamic Spring Season 2018 focuses on scandal and its impact. Putting on stage four shocking stories that will outrage, delight, and open our eyes to new perspectives, this season casts light on some of the extraordinary women who didn’t mind being the subject of scandal as long as they could remain true to themselves.
Lanie Robertson’s Woman Before A Glass brings Peggy Guggenheim’s remarkable story to life – showing how her love life was as colourful as her art collection and how her passionate loyalties changed the face of twentieth-century art. Mad as Hell, written by Cassie McFarlane and Adrian Hope, will reveal for the first time how the backdrop to Peter Finch’s iconic Oscar-winning performance in Network was as fiery as the role he played. It was a battle of race, prejudice and love that scandalised Hollywood.
Maureen Duffy’s double-bill, Hilda & Virginia, looks back on Virginia Woolf’s life, uncovering the hidden stories behind her iconic novels from the torture of depression to the scandal of her lesbian affairs. Closing the season, part madcap misadventure, part piercing social satire, Proud Haddock presents The Dog Beneath the Skin by Christopher Isherwood and W. H. Auden – a vivid depiction of a world on the brink of collapse that has never seemed so timely.
Tom Littler, Jermyn Street Theatre’s Artistic Director, comments, “Following the wonderful reception for our Escape Season so far, I am excited to announce our Scandal Season, which runs from the New Year until Easter 2018. It features three world premieres, one UK premiere, and a rare revival of a truly remarkable 1930s drama. The plays tell the stories of some incredible, path-breaking women, and we are especially proud to present the UK premiere of Lanie Robertson’s Woman Before a Glass, in a beautiful production by one of New York’s great directors, Austin Pendleton.”
Jermyn Street Theatre’s Spring Season 2018 is as follows:
Woman Before A Glass 17 January – 3 February (Mon – Sat 7.30pm, Sat 3.30pm) Press Night Friday 19 January, 7.30pm Peggy Guggenheim collected art, and artists. Married to Max Ernst, lover of Samuel Beckett, champion of Jackson Pollock and Pablo Picasso, Peggy’s love life was as colourful as her art collection. She moved to Venice in the late 1940s and quickly became one of its most glamorous, scandalous residents. Lanie Robertson’s play brings Peggy’s remarkable story to life. Peggy’s passionate loyalties and prejudices changed the face of twentieth century art – but at what cost?
Mad as Hell 7- 24 February (Mon – Sat 7:30pm, Thurs & Sat 3:30pm) Press Night Friday 9 February, 7.30pm A bar in Jamaica. The early 1960s. When womanizing, hell-raising film star Peter Finch meets Eletha Barrett, a charismatic island girl, they both get more than they bargained for. The relationship between Peter and Eletha scandalises Hollywood, and culminates in Finch’s Oscar-winning performance in Network.
A battle between the ‘isms and schisms’ of race and prejudice and the courage of love, Mad as Hell reveals for the first time how the backdrop to Finch’s iconic performance was as fiery as the role he played.
Hilda & Virginia 27 February – 3 March (Tues – Sat 7:30pm, Thurs & Sat, 3.30pm) Press Night Wednesday 28 February, 7.30pm Maureen Duffy’s double-bill tells the story of two remarkable women. The Choice is the story of a very unsaintly saint. Hilda of Whitby, who brought Christianity to the Anglo-Saxons, was a businesswoman, teacher and adviser to kings. In A Nightingale in Bloomsbury Square, Virginia Woolf looks back on her life, uncovering the hidden stories behind her iconic novels. From the torture of depression to the scandal of her lesbian affairs, Virginia goes down fighting. As the saying goes: well-behaved women don’t make history…
Proud Haddock presents The Dog Beneath the Skin 7 – 31 March (Mon – Sat 7.30pm, Sat 3.30pm) Press Night Friday 9 March, 7.30pm The sleepy English village of Pressan Ambo has a secret. Ten years ago, Sir Francis Crewe, heir to the local estate disappeared. Every year a young man is chosen by lot to go searching for him. Alan Norman, accompanied by a surprisingly intelligent dog, sets out on a journey through pre-War Europe.
Part madcap misadventure, part piercing social satire, Auden and Isherwood’s vivid depiction of a world on the brink of collapse has never seemed so timely.
Jermyn Street Theatre, 16b Jermyn Street, London SW1Y 6ST http://ift.tt/1hbpt2t
http://ift.tt/2ANCApl London Theatre 1
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proylea · 8 years
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Did you know? (B)
Did you know? (B)
  Jude Law’s marriage to Sadie Frost began in 1997 and ended in 2003. A contributing factor to the break-up was a near tragedy in October 2002 when Iris, their two year-old daughter, swallowed an ecstasy tablet she found on the floor at a children’s party and was rushed to hospital. Subsequent to her parents’ divorce, stories surfaced about ‘sex swap’ parties during the marriage that involved…
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