Title: The Reagans The Legacy Endures Rlj Entertainment / Image Entertainment Director: Robert D. Kline Narrator: David Purdham Running time: 91 minutes, Not Rated Special Features: None Available on DVD & Digital February 3rd, 2015 A documentary about Ronald and Nancy Reagan starting from their birth, to their careers in Hollywood, to marriage, kids and finally the presidency. Born in Illinois, Ronald Wilson Reagan was a high achiever who excelled in school, became student body president, a lifeguard, had a passion for acting and football. He graduated from Eureka College and pursued a career in radio, and was a sports announcer who specialized in play-by-play accounts. While traveling with the [ Read More ]
The post The Reagans The Legacy Endures DVD Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post The Reagans The Legacy Endures DVD Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 2/12/2015
- by juliana
- ShockYa
On the November 8 new episode of Brothers & Sisters, Calista Flockhart's character, Kitty, suffers through side effects of chemotherapy and expresses a hesitance to continue. We have a promo, a synopsis, photos and 5 sneak peeks to share with you below.
Kitty Faces Some Of The Unavoidable Side Effects Of Cancer Treatment, On ABC's "Brothers & Sisters"
"The Wig Party" — Kitty is devastated when she is faced with the visible ramifications of her cancer treatment, Nora makes a surprising friend with benefits, and Scotty takes stock when his father delivers some shocking news about his marriage, on "Brothers & Sisters," Sunday, NOVEMBER8 (10:01-11:00 p.m., Et) on the ABC Television Network.
"Brothers & Sisters" stars Dave Annable as Justin Walker, Maxwell Perry Cotton as Cooper Whedon, Kerris Lilla Dorsey as Paige, Sally Field as Nora Holden, Calista Flockhart as Kitty Walker, Balthazar Getty as Thomas Walker, Rachel Griffiths as Sarah Walker, Luke Grimes as Ryan Lafferty,...
Kitty Faces Some Of The Unavoidable Side Effects Of Cancer Treatment, On ABC's "Brothers & Sisters"
"The Wig Party" — Kitty is devastated when she is faced with the visible ramifications of her cancer treatment, Nora makes a surprising friend with benefits, and Scotty takes stock when his father delivers some shocking news about his marriage, on "Brothers & Sisters," Sunday, NOVEMBER8 (10:01-11:00 p.m., Et) on the ABC Television Network.
"Brothers & Sisters" stars Dave Annable as Justin Walker, Maxwell Perry Cotton as Cooper Whedon, Kerris Lilla Dorsey as Paige, Sally Field as Nora Holden, Calista Flockhart as Kitty Walker, Balthazar Getty as Thomas Walker, Rachel Griffiths as Sarah Walker, Luke Grimes as Ryan Lafferty,...
- 11/6/2009
- by Clarissa
- TVovermind.com
So Tommy came back from his Mexican meditation stint and so did his whiny energy. I couldn't delight in it the way his siblings and mother did. (Maybe Mandi will have a different take when she returns next week). Even as he was being Zen Tommy, being supportive of Justin's attempt to be a doctor and being all calm and stuff, I just knew he'd be back to his old ways, somehow blaming others for his bad behavior. This time Nora bore the brunt of it.When Nora found out that Tommy's wife Julia wanted a divorce and wasn't letting him see their daughter,...
- 11/2/2009
- by Abby West
- EW.com - PopWatch
Film review: 'The Real Thing'
Pasadena Playhouse
Through Feb. 22
British playwright Tom Stoppard has developed a sort of brilliant and brainy drawing-room comedy-drama that is his unmistakable signature. From the enigmatic "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" in 1967 to his latest, "The Invention of Love" (playing at London's National Theatre), Stoppard has managed to blend an inordinate amount of research, dazzling language and fascinating ideas. Along the way, he's managed to win a couple Tonys and New York Drama Critics Awards.
All this is vital preamble to Stoppard's "The Real Thing" (written in 1982). At best, it's solid stuff -- still a far cry from a Stoppard production at its best. Somehow, director Sheldon Epps has let the production flatten out and become much too academic and preachy.
Stoppard is never meant to be preachy. He's clever, biting, witty, passionate, ironic, enigmatic and full of incredible language and questions about the nature of writing (Stoppard is one of theater's great wordsmiths in the tradition of Shakespeare) and tenuous and ever-changing human relationships. With Stoppard, you really have to lean in, listen and ultimately work.
When the show was first staged more than a decade ago, it was done swiftly with a series of shifting panels, which blended past and present into a continuum -- part of Stoppard's conceit. With the revolving set of scenic designer James Leonard Joy and the lighting of Michael Gilliam, "The Real Thing" seems slower and set in an onstage world of reality instead of Stoppard's world of poetic leaps and bounds, where anything goes.
"The Real Thing" centers on playwright Henry (the apt Jeff Allin) and his search for the core of relationships, especially with his former actress-wife Charlotte (the solid Colette Kilroy), his current actress-wife Annie (the lovely Christina Haag) and teenage daughter Debbie (Annie Meisels, who is quite good). Scott Ferrara, David Purdham and David Mann add able support.
Against this backdrop of backstage relationships is the onstage business of Henry's plays, in which actors appear to act out their backstage relationship. As such, we get to see it both ways, once as theater and once as life, hence "the real thing." Soon the fact and the fiction blend, and we are left with the task of sorting things out for ourselves. It's not a simple task but well worth the effort.
THE REAL THING
Pasadena Playhouse
Director: Sheldon Epps
Playwright: Tom Stoppard
Scenic design: James Leonard Joy
Lighting design: Michael Gilliam
Costume design: Marianna Elliott
Sound design: Jeff Ladman
Cast:
Henry: Jeff Allin
Billy: Scott Ferrara
Annie: Christina Haag
Charlotte: Colette Kilroy
Brodie: David Mann
Debbie: Annie Meisels
Max: David Purdham...
Through Feb. 22
British playwright Tom Stoppard has developed a sort of brilliant and brainy drawing-room comedy-drama that is his unmistakable signature. From the enigmatic "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" in 1967 to his latest, "The Invention of Love" (playing at London's National Theatre), Stoppard has managed to blend an inordinate amount of research, dazzling language and fascinating ideas. Along the way, he's managed to win a couple Tonys and New York Drama Critics Awards.
All this is vital preamble to Stoppard's "The Real Thing" (written in 1982). At best, it's solid stuff -- still a far cry from a Stoppard production at its best. Somehow, director Sheldon Epps has let the production flatten out and become much too academic and preachy.
Stoppard is never meant to be preachy. He's clever, biting, witty, passionate, ironic, enigmatic and full of incredible language and questions about the nature of writing (Stoppard is one of theater's great wordsmiths in the tradition of Shakespeare) and tenuous and ever-changing human relationships. With Stoppard, you really have to lean in, listen and ultimately work.
When the show was first staged more than a decade ago, it was done swiftly with a series of shifting panels, which blended past and present into a continuum -- part of Stoppard's conceit. With the revolving set of scenic designer James Leonard Joy and the lighting of Michael Gilliam, "The Real Thing" seems slower and set in an onstage world of reality instead of Stoppard's world of poetic leaps and bounds, where anything goes.
"The Real Thing" centers on playwright Henry (the apt Jeff Allin) and his search for the core of relationships, especially with his former actress-wife Charlotte (the solid Colette Kilroy), his current actress-wife Annie (the lovely Christina Haag) and teenage daughter Debbie (Annie Meisels, who is quite good). Scott Ferrara, David Purdham and David Mann add able support.
Against this backdrop of backstage relationships is the onstage business of Henry's plays, in which actors appear to act out their backstage relationship. As such, we get to see it both ways, once as theater and once as life, hence "the real thing." Soon the fact and the fiction blend, and we are left with the task of sorting things out for ourselves. It's not a simple task but well worth the effort.
THE REAL THING
Pasadena Playhouse
Director: Sheldon Epps
Playwright: Tom Stoppard
Scenic design: James Leonard Joy
Lighting design: Michael Gilliam
Costume design: Marianna Elliott
Sound design: Jeff Ladman
Cast:
Henry: Jeff Allin
Billy: Scott Ferrara
Annie: Christina Haag
Charlotte: Colette Kilroy
Brodie: David Mann
Debbie: Annie Meisels
Max: David Purdham...
- 1/21/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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