Get ready for another explosive episode of “Made in Chelsea,” airing on E4 this Tuesday at 9:00 Pm. In Season 27, Episode 2, viewers are in for a whirlwind of drama, romance, and unexpected twists that will keep them on the edge of their seats.
Sam and Yas have been sailing smoothly in their relationship, but a shocking allegation threatens to rock the boat and change everything. As they navigate this unexpected challenge, viewers will witness the strength of their bond put to the test like never before.
Meanwhile, Freddy continues his relentless pursuit of Jazz, adding fuel to the fire of romantic tension that simmers beneath the surface. With each move he makes, the stakes are raised, and viewers can’t help but wonder what the future holds for this complicated love triangle.
As if that wasn’t enough, Tristan and Lauren find themselves in the midst of crisis talks, forced...
Sam and Yas have been sailing smoothly in their relationship, but a shocking allegation threatens to rock the boat and change everything. As they navigate this unexpected challenge, viewers will witness the strength of their bond put to the test like never before.
Meanwhile, Freddy continues his relentless pursuit of Jazz, adding fuel to the fire of romantic tension that simmers beneath the surface. With each move he makes, the stakes are raised, and viewers can’t help but wonder what the future holds for this complicated love triangle.
As if that wasn’t enough, Tristan and Lauren find themselves in the midst of crisis talks, forced...
- 4/10/2024
- by Posts UK
- TV Everyday
Get ready for the highly anticipated return of “Made in Chelsea” as Season 27 Episode 1 hits the screens on E4 at 9:00 Pm on Monday, April 15, 2024. After an eventful trip to Sydney, the cast members find themselves back in Chelsea, where drama and romance await.
In this thrilling episode, viewers will witness the newlyweds Maeva and James facing challenges in the bedroom, highlighting the cracks in their relationship. Meanwhile, Tristan and Lauren attempt to reignite their romance, but will their efforts lead to success or further complications?
Adding fuel to the fire, tensions rise as Freddy takes a swipe at Hugo for his treatment of Jazz, setting the stage for potential confrontations and clashes among the group.
Don’t miss out on the drama, romance, and intrigue of Season 27 Episode 1 of “Made in Chelsea.” Tune in at 9:00 Pm on Monday to catch all the excitement as the cast navigates the...
In this thrilling episode, viewers will witness the newlyweds Maeva and James facing challenges in the bedroom, highlighting the cracks in their relationship. Meanwhile, Tristan and Lauren attempt to reignite their romance, but will their efforts lead to success or further complications?
Adding fuel to the fire, tensions rise as Freddy takes a swipe at Hugo for his treatment of Jazz, setting the stage for potential confrontations and clashes among the group.
Don’t miss out on the drama, romance, and intrigue of Season 27 Episode 1 of “Made in Chelsea.” Tune in at 9:00 Pm on Monday to catch all the excitement as the cast navigates the...
- 4/9/2024
- by Posts UK
- TV Everyday
Lily Gladstone and Riley Keough are joining forces for Hulu true crime series “Under the Bridge.”
Based on Rebecca Godfrey’s 2005 book, “Under the Bridge” revisits the 1997 true story of 14-year old outcast Reena Virk (Vritika Gupta) who went to join friends at a party and never returned home. Reena was found dead in Craigflower Bridge in Saanich, British Columbia after being beaten. The show examines the hidden world of the teenagers accused of Reena’s murder as the truth comes to light as to who the unlikely killer really was. The series is part of Hulu’s stacked Spring 2024 slate.
Gladstone stars as fictional police officer Cam Bentland investigating the case. Keough plays author Godfrey as she struggles to balance her own psyche as she reports on Reena’s killing. “Euphoria” star Javon “Wanna” Walton, Chloe Guidry, Izzy G., Aiyana Goodfellow, and Ezra Faroque Khan co-star with “The Good Wife” alum Archie Panjabi.
Based on Rebecca Godfrey’s 2005 book, “Under the Bridge” revisits the 1997 true story of 14-year old outcast Reena Virk (Vritika Gupta) who went to join friends at a party and never returned home. Reena was found dead in Craigflower Bridge in Saanich, British Columbia after being beaten. The show examines the hidden world of the teenagers accused of Reena’s murder as the truth comes to light as to who the unlikely killer really was. The series is part of Hulu’s stacked Spring 2024 slate.
Gladstone stars as fictional police officer Cam Bentland investigating the case. Keough plays author Godfrey as she struggles to balance her own psyche as she reports on Reena’s killing. “Euphoria” star Javon “Wanna” Walton, Chloe Guidry, Izzy G., Aiyana Goodfellow, and Ezra Faroque Khan co-star with “The Good Wife” alum Archie Panjabi.
- 3/25/2024
- by Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire
Lady Gaga is returning to Las Vegas for more shows as part of her Jazz & Piano residency at Park MGM’s Dolby Live!
The Grammy and Oscar-winning entertainer just announced that she has eight more shows coming this summer and tickets are going on sale very soon.
In the Jazz & Piano show, Gaga covers songs from the American songbook like “New York, New York,” “Someone to Watch Over Me,” and “Luck Be a Lady.” She also does jazz renditions of her famous songs like “Born This Way” and “Poker Face.”
Keep reading to find out more…
Gaga debuted the Jazz & Piano show in January 2019 and she was performing the concert in rotation with her Enigma pop show. While she has continued performing Jazz & Piano over the years, Enigma hasn’t been performed since December 2019.
The 2024 shows will be performed on June 19, June 20, June 27, June 29, June 30, July 3, July 5, and July 6.
Pre-sales...
The Grammy and Oscar-winning entertainer just announced that she has eight more shows coming this summer and tickets are going on sale very soon.
In the Jazz & Piano show, Gaga covers songs from the American songbook like “New York, New York,” “Someone to Watch Over Me,” and “Luck Be a Lady.” She also does jazz renditions of her famous songs like “Born This Way” and “Poker Face.”
Keep reading to find out more…
Gaga debuted the Jazz & Piano show in January 2019 and she was performing the concert in rotation with her Enigma pop show. While she has continued performing Jazz & Piano over the years, Enigma hasn’t been performed since December 2019.
The 2024 shows will be performed on June 19, June 20, June 27, June 29, June 30, July 3, July 5, and July 6.
Pre-sales...
- 3/19/2024
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Lady Gaga is heading back to Las Vegas for another of her extremely popular “Jazz & Piano” residencies at the Park MGM Dolby Live.
The eight-show residency will run from June 19 through July 6. Tickets go on sale to the general public this Saturday.
Billed as featuring Gaga’s performances of music from the Great American Songbook, as well as stripped-down versions of her own hits, this summer’s residency also will include performances of tracks from Love for Sale, her recent jazz album of Cole Porter tunes.
Reports of the residency had recently surfaced among Vegas news outlets, but Gaga herself confirmed, and revealed specific dates, in an Instagram Story post this morning.
Gaga’s first Jazz & Piano residency was in 2019, with a set list that included Great American Songbook selections such as “Luck Be A Lady” and “Someone To Watch Over Me,” alongside the star’s hits such as “Poker Face.
The eight-show residency will run from June 19 through July 6. Tickets go on sale to the general public this Saturday.
Billed as featuring Gaga’s performances of music from the Great American Songbook, as well as stripped-down versions of her own hits, this summer’s residency also will include performances of tracks from Love for Sale, her recent jazz album of Cole Porter tunes.
Reports of the residency had recently surfaced among Vegas news outlets, but Gaga herself confirmed, and revealed specific dates, in an Instagram Story post this morning.
Gaga’s first Jazz & Piano residency was in 2019, with a set list that included Great American Songbook selections such as “Luck Be A Lady” and “Someone To Watch Over Me,” alongside the star’s hits such as “Poker Face.
- 3/19/2024
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
I throw around the concept of “Grammy darlings” a lot, but what exactly constitutes a Grammy darling? Is it just an artist who doesn’t lose Grammys often, like U2, Adele or Bruno Mars? Let’s go through a few top names.
Beyoncé: Darling
Listen, the most awarded person in Grammy history is definitely a darling. Granted, she has yet to win Album of the Year. However, more impressively, all of her projects have won at least one Grammy. Most have won multiple, including “Dangerously in Love,” “Lemonade,” and “Renaissance.” Beyoncé also gets nominations for pretty much anything she submits, and will likely become the first artist to nab nominations in rap, rock, R&b, dance, pop and country. On top of all that, it’s rare for Beyoncé to miss nominations in the general field, especially with no nominations review committees anymore to potentially force her out.
Sign...
Beyoncé: Darling
Listen, the most awarded person in Grammy history is definitely a darling. Granted, she has yet to win Album of the Year. However, more impressively, all of her projects have won at least one Grammy. Most have won multiple, including “Dangerously in Love,” “Lemonade,” and “Renaissance.” Beyoncé also gets nominations for pretty much anything she submits, and will likely become the first artist to nab nominations in rap, rock, R&b, dance, pop and country. On top of all that, it’s rare for Beyoncé to miss nominations in the general field, especially with no nominations review committees anymore to potentially force her out.
Sign...
- 3/15/2024
- by Jaime Rodriguez
- Gold Derby
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American history is a pot of gumbo, explains Anderson .Paak. He says it’s no different than hip hop, something that came out of necessity that ultimately created an entirely different way of looking at music. Arguably the heart of Jazz as a genre is the Big Easy, and Anderson has recently teamed up with Expedia to help travelers experience New Orleans like never before, by being at...
American history is a pot of gumbo, explains Anderson .Paak. He says it’s no different than hip hop, something that came out of necessity that ultimately created an entirely different way of looking at music. Arguably the heart of Jazz as a genre is the Big Easy, and Anderson has recently teamed up with Expedia to help travelers experience New Orleans like never before, by being at...
- 3/14/2024
- by Sage Anderson
- Rollingstone.com
Mumbai, Feb 5 (Ians) Jazz singer-songwriter Nicole Zuraitis lifted the trophy for Best Jazz Vocal Album at the currently ongoing 66th edition Grammy Awards. She won the honour for her album ‘How Love Begins’.
The Recording Academy took to its official handle on micro-blogging site X and congratulated the winner. They wrote, “Congrats Best Jazz Vocal Album winner – ‘How Love Begins’ @nicolezmusic . #GRAMMYs”.
Zuraitis defeated fellow nominees Patti Austin and Gordon Goodwin’s Big Phat Band, Fred Hersch & Esperanza, Gretchen Parlato & Lionel Loueke, and Cecile McLorin Salvant.
Nicole’s album is a collection of original songs.
The 65th annual Grammy Awards, which recognises the best recordings, compositions, and artists are being held at the Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles Trevor Noah as the show’s host.
–Ians
aa/sha...
The Recording Academy took to its official handle on micro-blogging site X and congratulated the winner. They wrote, “Congrats Best Jazz Vocal Album winner – ‘How Love Begins’ @nicolezmusic . #GRAMMYs”.
Zuraitis defeated fellow nominees Patti Austin and Gordon Goodwin’s Big Phat Band, Fred Hersch & Esperanza, Gretchen Parlato & Lionel Loueke, and Cecile McLorin Salvant.
Nicole’s album is a collection of original songs.
The 65th annual Grammy Awards, which recognises the best recordings, compositions, and artists are being held at the Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles Trevor Noah as the show’s host.
–Ians
aa/sha...
- 2/5/2024
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
Plot: A three-part documentary series chronicling the iconic forefathers of hip-hop, Run Dmc. This unique series will take you back to the 1980s, when Joseph “Rev Run” Simmons, Darryl “Dmc” McDaniels, and Jason “Jam Master Jay” Mizell cultivated a one-of-a-kind sound that took not only Queens, but the world, by storm.
Review: In college, a professor made us watch Ken Burns’ series Jazz. At first, I rolled my eyes at the prospect of watching an eighteen-hour documentary about one genre of music. I was shocked when I became engrossed by the series and began appreciating jazz as never before. Few documentaries can harness an entire genre in such a way, but the new three-part series Kings From Queens: The Run Dmc Story manages to encapsulate the origin of rap by focusing on one of the most legendary duos to ever perform. With direct participation from Joseph Simmons and Daryl McDaniels,...
Review: In college, a professor made us watch Ken Burns’ series Jazz. At first, I rolled my eyes at the prospect of watching an eighteen-hour documentary about one genre of music. I was shocked when I became engrossed by the series and began appreciating jazz as never before. Few documentaries can harness an entire genre in such a way, but the new three-part series Kings From Queens: The Run Dmc Story manages to encapsulate the origin of rap by focusing on one of the most legendary duos to ever perform. With direct participation from Joseph Simmons and Daryl McDaniels,...
- 1/31/2024
- by Alex Maidy
- JoBlo.com
A formally rigorous and free-associative dive into a decade’s worth of political fighting in the Congo, from roughly 1955 to 1965, Johan Grimonprez’s “Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat” is a fascinating and sprawling historical overview. Eschewing the usual mix of contextual talking heads, the Belgian filmmaker and multimedia artist instead adopts its narrative approach from the jazz that flows freely throughout the film and helps frame the political struggles of the Congo.
Continue reading ‘Soundtrack To A Coup d’Etat’ Review: Experimental Documentary Deftly Explores The Connections Between Jazz & The Congo [Sundance] at The Playlist.
Continue reading ‘Soundtrack To A Coup d’Etat’ Review: Experimental Documentary Deftly Explores The Connections Between Jazz & The Congo [Sundance] at The Playlist.
- 1/24/2024
- by Christian Gallichio
- The Playlist
Actor, director and playwright Kwame Kwei-Armah has joined the board of Fifth Season-backed production company The Story Collective.
In the role, Kwei-Armah will bring expertise and mentorship to various projects in development as well as nurturing new ideas to bring to screen.
Kwei-Armah is currently the artistic director for the Young Vic theater in London. Previously he served as artistic director of Baltimore Center Stage in Maryland, where he directed Toni Morrison’s “Jazz” and “One Night in Miami,” which was later adapted into a film starring Kingsley Ben-Adir.
He is set to make his directorial feature debut with upcoming film “The Collaboration,” starring Paul Bettany as Andy Warhol and Jeremy Pope as Jean-Michel Basquiat. He directed both the London and Broadway versions of the play. He also co-wrote John Boyega starrer “Breaking” and an episode of “Soon Gone: A Windrush Chronicle,” on which he was also an exec producer.
In the role, Kwei-Armah will bring expertise and mentorship to various projects in development as well as nurturing new ideas to bring to screen.
Kwei-Armah is currently the artistic director for the Young Vic theater in London. Previously he served as artistic director of Baltimore Center Stage in Maryland, where he directed Toni Morrison’s “Jazz” and “One Night in Miami,” which was later adapted into a film starring Kingsley Ben-Adir.
He is set to make his directorial feature debut with upcoming film “The Collaboration,” starring Paul Bettany as Andy Warhol and Jeremy Pope as Jean-Michel Basquiat. He directed both the London and Broadway versions of the play. He also co-wrote John Boyega starrer “Breaking” and an episode of “Soon Gone: A Windrush Chronicle,” on which he was also an exec producer.
- 1/11/2024
- by K.J. Yossman
- Variety Film + TV
When Zeenat Aman in her Insta post paying tribute to Feroze Khan has written that the Oxford’s word for 2023 is Rizz which means charisma and Feroze Khan was the star who had the charisma or the Rizz. Expanding the analogy further, in the world of music, it was Rd Burman aka Pancham who oozed of risk or the charisma through his music. On the eve of his death anniversary here is a tribute to the legend-Pancham.
Most of us in either of the night spots or for welcoming the new year at home would have ushered the occasion getting drooled and swooned to either of the multitude of compositions that Rahul Dev Burman aka Pancham has left for us, but how many from amongst us remember that just after four days, when we herald the new year, falls his death anniversary.
The remix industry that has created a slot...
Most of us in either of the night spots or for welcoming the new year at home would have ushered the occasion getting drooled and swooned to either of the multitude of compositions that Rahul Dev Burman aka Pancham has left for us, but how many from amongst us remember that just after four days, when we herald the new year, falls his death anniversary.
The remix industry that has created a slot...
- 1/4/2024
- by Nalin Rai
- GlamSham
The first reactions to Paul King’s Wonka, the prequel to Roald Dahl’s beloved Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, are in, with much praise for the film’s star Timothée Chalamet as the enigmatic Willy Wonka.
The origin film follows Chalamet’s Willy Wonka from his beginnings selling candy in a small shop to his rise as an eccentric genius chocolatier and the creation of his fantastical chocolate factory.
“#Wonka/ #WonkaMovie is a winning confection, filled with perfect amounts of charm, whimsy & poignancy, powered by pure imagination & bright, nimble musical numbers,” wrote Courtney Howard. “Timothée Chalamet is a charisma factory. His full committal is intoxicating. Hugh Grant in exceptional Idgaf mode.”
Gizmodo senior reporter Germain Lussier wrote that Chalamet “alone is reason to see the film,” adding “He’s infinitely charming and a blast to watch.” However, he wrote, “The movie around him isn’t as good but it’s enjoyable.
The origin film follows Chalamet’s Willy Wonka from his beginnings selling candy in a small shop to his rise as an eccentric genius chocolatier and the creation of his fantastical chocolate factory.
“#Wonka/ #WonkaMovie is a winning confection, filled with perfect amounts of charm, whimsy & poignancy, powered by pure imagination & bright, nimble musical numbers,” wrote Courtney Howard. “Timothée Chalamet is a charisma factory. His full committal is intoxicating. Hugh Grant in exceptional Idgaf mode.”
Gizmodo senior reporter Germain Lussier wrote that Chalamet “alone is reason to see the film,” adding “He’s infinitely charming and a blast to watch.” However, he wrote, “The movie around him isn’t as good but it’s enjoyable.
- 11/29/2023
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
The Utah Jazz will open up their 2023 NBA season by hosting the Sacramento Kings on Wednesday, Oct. 25 at 9 p.m. Et. It’s probably fair to say both teams “overperformed” last season based on media expectations – just don’t tell the players that. The Jazz and Kings will be looking to prove they’re both for real in this Western Conference clash. Catch all the action on NBC Sports California, which you can watch with a five-day free trial of Directv Stream.
How to Watch Utah Jazz vs. Sacramento Kings When: Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023 at 9 p.m. Et Location: Delta Center | 301 S Temple, Salt Lake City, Ut 84101 TV: NBC Sports California Stream: Watch with a five-day free trial of Directv Stream. Watch Jazz vs. Kings 5 Days Free directv.com/live-sports Directv Stream’s five-day free trial is the best way to watch the NBA.
How to Watch Utah Jazz vs. Sacramento...
How to Watch Utah Jazz vs. Sacramento Kings When: Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023 at 9 p.m. Et Location: Delta Center | 301 S Temple, Salt Lake City, Ut 84101 TV: NBC Sports California Stream: Watch with a five-day free trial of Directv Stream. Watch Jazz vs. Kings 5 Days Free directv.com/live-sports Directv Stream’s five-day free trial is the best way to watch the NBA.
How to Watch Utah Jazz vs. Sacramento...
- 10/25/2023
- by Thomas Waschenfelder
- The Streamable
Other teams that have departed cable-based regional sports networks this year may be able to expect a similar bump, according to findings from Nielsen.
The news that the Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury could be leaving Bally Sports Arizona this spring was hardly a surprise to those who had been following the struggles of Bally Sports regional sports networks (RSNs). But what did shock many observers was the fact that once those teams were free of their former Rsn, they opted to show their games on local broadcast channels instead.
The Phoenix Mercury drew almost six times as many viewers to games now that they’re on local broadcast channels as opposed to cable. Other sports teams leaving cable for broadcast channels might see similar improvements in ratings. Companion in-market streaming services will help teams reach more fans than they ever did on cable. Sports Teams Cut the Cord
New...
The news that the Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury could be leaving Bally Sports Arizona this spring was hardly a surprise to those who had been following the struggles of Bally Sports regional sports networks (RSNs). But what did shock many observers was the fact that once those teams were free of their former Rsn, they opted to show their games on local broadcast channels instead.
The Phoenix Mercury drew almost six times as many viewers to games now that they’re on local broadcast channels as opposed to cable. Other sports teams leaving cable for broadcast channels might see similar improvements in ratings. Companion in-market streaming services will help teams reach more fans than they ever did on cable. Sports Teams Cut the Cord
New...
- 10/24/2023
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
The celebrities and pros of Dancing with the Stars are heading to the ballroom floor to celebrate Disney’s 100th anniversary. The series honors some of the most iconic animated films in Disney’s catalog set to ballroom standards, such as a Foxtrot, Jazz, Waltz, Paso Doble, Contemporary, Rumba, and Waltz. Here are all the details about DWTS’ Disney night performance, including the songs, dances, and remaining competitors.
What songs will be featured during ‘DWTS’ Disney Night?
DWTS will feature songs honoring Disney’s legacy in animation, ranging from one of its earliest classics to contemporary favorites. Dances will pay homage to these films and characters while incorporating proper ballroom techniques.
The remaining 11 celebrities and their pro partners will take to the ballroom floor to demonstrate their dance skills to the following Disney songs. Here is the complete list of songs and dances.
Alyson Hannigan and Sasha Farber will perform...
What songs will be featured during ‘DWTS’ Disney Night?
DWTS will feature songs honoring Disney’s legacy in animation, ranging from one of its earliest classics to contemporary favorites. Dances will pay homage to these films and characters while incorporating proper ballroom techniques.
The remaining 11 celebrities and their pro partners will take to the ballroom floor to demonstrate their dance skills to the following Disney songs. Here is the complete list of songs and dances.
Alyson Hannigan and Sasha Farber will perform...
- 10/17/2023
- by Lucille Barilla
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
The new streaming platform is available to Jazz fans now, and will include the ability to purchase single-game streams.
The Utah Jazz are ready to shock the rest of the NBA. The team starts its season on Oct. 25 against the Sacramento Kings and is hoping that players like Lauri Markkanen and Walker Kessler can improve on strong 2022 seasons to help the team make some moves in the playoffs.
But before that happens, the Jazz have to play out their regular season. Fans of the team will be able to watch them on a brand-new home this year: Kjzz. It’s the first season the Jazz won’t be seen on a regional sports network in years, and now the team is partnering with the independent video firm Kiswe to launch an in-market streaming platform to better serve cord-cutting fans.
The streamer is called Jazz+ and is accessible to fans this week.
The Utah Jazz are ready to shock the rest of the NBA. The team starts its season on Oct. 25 against the Sacramento Kings and is hoping that players like Lauri Markkanen and Walker Kessler can improve on strong 2022 seasons to help the team make some moves in the playoffs.
But before that happens, the Jazz have to play out their regular season. Fans of the team will be able to watch them on a brand-new home this year: Kjzz. It’s the first season the Jazz won’t be seen on a regional sports network in years, and now the team is partnering with the independent video firm Kiswe to launch an in-market streaming platform to better serve cord-cutting fans.
The streamer is called Jazz+ and is accessible to fans this week.
- 9/28/2023
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
The road to power, a heart-warming friendship, and the charm of the 60s, Disney+ Hostar’s upcoming power-packed series, Sultan Of Delhi has it all. Based on the book, ‘Sultan of Delhi: Ascension by Arnab Ray’, the series is produced by Reliance Entertainment Directed by Milan Luthria and Co-Directed and Co-written by Suparn Verma.
Reimagining the charm of old India and creating a visual spectacle on-screen, Milan Luthria marks his Ott directorial debut with this larger-than-life mass entertainer, ‘Sultan Of Delhi” which is all set to release on 13th October 2023.
The series stars Tahir Raj Bhasin, Anjumm Shharma, veteran actor Vinay Pathak alongside Nishant Dahiya and the ladies Anupriya Goenka, Mouni Roy, Harleen Sethi and Mehreen Pirzada, making for a perfect ensemble cast.
Actor Mouni Roy has time and again captivated audiences with her incredible performances. For Sultan Of Delhi, the actress had to prepare for a special cabaret dance...
Reimagining the charm of old India and creating a visual spectacle on-screen, Milan Luthria marks his Ott directorial debut with this larger-than-life mass entertainer, ‘Sultan Of Delhi” which is all set to release on 13th October 2023.
The series stars Tahir Raj Bhasin, Anjumm Shharma, veteran actor Vinay Pathak alongside Nishant Dahiya and the ladies Anupriya Goenka, Mouni Roy, Harleen Sethi and Mehreen Pirzada, making for a perfect ensemble cast.
Actor Mouni Roy has time and again captivated audiences with her incredible performances. For Sultan Of Delhi, the actress had to prepare for a special cabaret dance...
- 9/26/2023
- by Editorial Desk
- GlamSham
The road to power, a heart-warming friendship, and the charm of the 60s, Disney+ Hostar’s upcoming power-packed series, Sultan Of Delhi has it all. Based on the book, ‘Sultan of Delhi: Ascension by Arnab Ray’, the series is produced by Reliance Entertainment Directed by Milan Luthria and Co-Directed and Co-written by Suparn Verma.
Reimagining the charm of old India and creating a visual spectacle on-screen, Milan Luthria marks his Ott directorial debut with this larger-than-life mass entertainer, ‘Sultan Of Delhi” which is all set to release on 13th October 2023.
The series stars Tahir Raj Bhasin, Anjumm Shharma, veteran actor Vinay Pathak alongside Nishant Dahiya and the ladies Anupriya Goenka, Mouni Roy, Harleen Sethi and Mehreen Pirzada, making for a perfect ensemble cast.
Actor Mouni Roy has time and again captivated audiences with her incredible performances. For Sultan Of Delhi, the actress had to prepare for a special cabaret dance...
Reimagining the charm of old India and creating a visual spectacle on-screen, Milan Luthria marks his Ott directorial debut with this larger-than-life mass entertainer, ‘Sultan Of Delhi” which is all set to release on 13th October 2023.
The series stars Tahir Raj Bhasin, Anjumm Shharma, veteran actor Vinay Pathak alongside Nishant Dahiya and the ladies Anupriya Goenka, Mouni Roy, Harleen Sethi and Mehreen Pirzada, making for a perfect ensemble cast.
Actor Mouni Roy has time and again captivated audiences with her incredible performances. For Sultan Of Delhi, the actress had to prepare for a special cabaret dance...
- 9/26/2023
- by Editorial Desk
Documentary veterans Natalie Bullock Brown, Kirsten Johnson, Mary Lampson and Jacqueline Olive are the inaugural documentary film fellows for the documentary film in the public interest research initiative by Harvard’s Shorenstein Center.
As the first cohort of doc film fellows, the foursome will join the center for the fall 2023 semester. There, each fellow will conduct research and do public education activities about questions facing the documentary film field and civic information.
Led by Shorenstein Center’s director Nancy Gibbs and doc filmmaker Sara Archambault, the initiative, which was established in March, will work to examine the challenges facing the documentary field and their impacts on civic life and information.
“In this challenging moment for media and our information ecosystem, we are excited that the Shorenstein Center can provide the support and infrastructure to drive renewed and creative thinking about complex issues in the documentary film space,” says Gibbs.
Archambault...
As the first cohort of doc film fellows, the foursome will join the center for the fall 2023 semester. There, each fellow will conduct research and do public education activities about questions facing the documentary film field and civic information.
Led by Shorenstein Center’s director Nancy Gibbs and doc filmmaker Sara Archambault, the initiative, which was established in March, will work to examine the challenges facing the documentary field and their impacts on civic life and information.
“In this challenging moment for media and our information ecosystem, we are excited that the Shorenstein Center can provide the support and infrastructure to drive renewed and creative thinking about complex issues in the documentary film space,” says Gibbs.
Archambault...
- 9/5/2023
- by Addie Morfoot
- Variety Film + TV
Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone have reteamed and the result, “Poor Things,” is being heralded as a new classic for the ages.
In “Poor Things,” Stone plays a young woman named Bella Baxter who is brought back to life by the “brilliant and unorthodox scientist” Dr. Goodwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Under Baxter’s protection, Bella is eager to learn. Hungry for the worldliness she is lacking, Bella runs off with Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo), a slick and debauched lawyer, on a whirlwind adventure across the continents. Free from the prejudices of her times, Bella grows steadfast in her purpose to stand for equality and liberation.
The reviews for the movie have been effusive in their praise and social media is hailing the film for embracing both Lanthimos’ brand of wackiness while also being extremely graphic.
Film critic Alex Billington said, “Poor Things is… the raunchiest film of the decade?! Everyone...
In “Poor Things,” Stone plays a young woman named Bella Baxter who is brought back to life by the “brilliant and unorthodox scientist” Dr. Goodwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Under Baxter’s protection, Bella is eager to learn. Hungry for the worldliness she is lacking, Bella runs off with Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo), a slick and debauched lawyer, on a whirlwind adventure across the continents. Free from the prejudices of her times, Bella grows steadfast in her purpose to stand for equality and liberation.
The reviews for the movie have been effusive in their praise and social media is hailing the film for embracing both Lanthimos’ brand of wackiness while also being extremely graphic.
Film critic Alex Billington said, “Poor Things is… the raunchiest film of the decade?! Everyone...
- 9/1/2023
- by Kristen Lopez
- The Wrap
Little Monsters, get ready to pack for a weekend of jazz in Vegas. Lady Gaga recently announced the return of her Jazz & Piano residency, with tickets now on sale through Gaga’s website and Ticketmaster.
Originally launched back in 2019, the latest run of Jazz & Piano shows follows 2021 and 2022 dates and sees the pop superstar taking fans through the Great American Songbook once again. The new slate of concerts kicks off at the end of August at the Dolby Live at Park MGM and runs through the first week of October.
Originally launched back in 2019, the latest run of Jazz & Piano shows follows 2021 and 2022 dates and sees the pop superstar taking fans through the Great American Songbook once again. The new slate of concerts kicks off at the end of August at the Dolby Live at Park MGM and runs through the first week of October.
- 8/7/2023
- by John Lonsdale
- Rollingstone.com
On the brink of turning 70, Ken Burns will release his very first film, “Working in Rural New England,” which he made as an undergraduate at Hampshire College. The 28-minute docu will be released July 25 on Unum, Burn’s American history digital platform on PBS.
About Old Sturbridge Village, an outdoor history museum in Massachusetts that re-creates life in rural New England from 1790 through the 1830s, the docu was commissioned by the museum in 1973. The film served as Burns’ senior thesis at the liberal arts college in nearby Amherst, Mass. Accompanying the doc on Unum is a pre-recorded conversation between Burns and New York Times literary critic A.O. Scott.
“It in some ways does not look like a Ken Burns film,” Scott says during his conversation with Burns. “It’s moving images in the present day, in color. So, it doesn’t immediately say to a modern viewer, a film by Ken Burns.
About Old Sturbridge Village, an outdoor history museum in Massachusetts that re-creates life in rural New England from 1790 through the 1830s, the docu was commissioned by the museum in 1973. The film served as Burns’ senior thesis at the liberal arts college in nearby Amherst, Mass. Accompanying the doc on Unum is a pre-recorded conversation between Burns and New York Times literary critic A.O. Scott.
“It in some ways does not look like a Ken Burns film,” Scott says during his conversation with Burns. “It’s moving images in the present day, in color. So, it doesn’t immediately say to a modern viewer, a film by Ken Burns.
- 7/25/2023
- by Addie Morfoot
- Variety Film + TV
The explosive first reactions to Christopher Nolan’s WWII epic “Oppenheimer” have lit the internet ablaze.
The film hosted its world premiere in Paris, shortly before the cast walked out of the U.K. premiere amid the SAG-AFTRA strike being announced July 14. “Oppenheimer” is set to debut in theaters July 20 and stars Cillian Murphy as the titular father of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer. Emily Blunt, Florence Pugh, Matt Damon, and Robert Downey Jr. are among the star-studded ensemble cast.
Writer-director Nolan used real explosions in lieu of CGI to mimic the first detonation of the atomic bomb during the Trinity Test. The entire film was shot in IMAX. “Oppenheimer” is inspired by 2005 book “American Prometheus” by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin and centers on Manhattan Project leader J. Robert Oppenheimer (Murphy) as he grapples with the moral repercussions of creating the bomb.
Murphy’s co-star...
The film hosted its world premiere in Paris, shortly before the cast walked out of the U.K. premiere amid the SAG-AFTRA strike being announced July 14. “Oppenheimer” is set to debut in theaters July 20 and stars Cillian Murphy as the titular father of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer. Emily Blunt, Florence Pugh, Matt Damon, and Robert Downey Jr. are among the star-studded ensemble cast.
Writer-director Nolan used real explosions in lieu of CGI to mimic the first detonation of the atomic bomb during the Trinity Test. The entire film was shot in IMAX. “Oppenheimer” is inspired by 2005 book “American Prometheus” by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin and centers on Manhattan Project leader J. Robert Oppenheimer (Murphy) as he grapples with the moral repercussions of creating the bomb.
Murphy’s co-star...
- 7/14/2023
- by Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire
During a recent Gold Derby video interview, news and features editor Ray Richmond spoke in-depth with Ken Burns about the three-part, six-hour documentary film he co-produced and co-directed for PBS, “The U.S. and the Holocaust,” which is eligible at the 2023 Emmy Awards. Watch the full video above and read the complete interview transcript below.
“I will never work on a more important film than this one,” declares Burns of “The U.S. and the Holocaust,” the film documentary he co-produced and co-directed (with frequent collaborators Lynn Novick and Sarah Botstein) and released last September. Coming from Burns, that’s a mouthful, considering he is perhaps the most celebrated documentarian of our time and the foremost chronicler of the American experience. He’s a filmmaker who is responsible for many of the most treasured nonfiction series and biographies ever put to film, among them “The Civil War,” “Baseball,” “Jazz,” “Jackie Robinson” and “The Vietnam War.
“I will never work on a more important film than this one,” declares Burns of “The U.S. and the Holocaust,” the film documentary he co-produced and co-directed (with frequent collaborators Lynn Novick and Sarah Botstein) and released last September. Coming from Burns, that’s a mouthful, considering he is perhaps the most celebrated documentarian of our time and the foremost chronicler of the American experience. He’s a filmmaker who is responsible for many of the most treasured nonfiction series and biographies ever put to film, among them “The Civil War,” “Baseball,” “Jazz,” “Jackie Robinson” and “The Vietnam War.
- 6/22/2023
- by Ray Richmond
- Gold Derby
The Recording Academy has announced the addition of three new categories for the 66th Annual Grammy Awards. Those new awards include Best African Music Performance, Best Pop Dance Recording, and Best Alternative Jazz Album.
In addition, The Academy has also moved the non-classical Producer of the Year and Songwriter of the Year categories to the general voting field, meaning that they are open to all Grammy voters. According to The Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr., the changes come as an attempt to show their “commitment to actively listen and respond” to criticism and suggestions from fans and fellow participants in the music community, as well as stay on top of burgeoning music scenes that “align with the ever-evolving musical landscape.”
“By introducing these three new categories, we are able to acknowledge and appreciate a broader array of artists — and relocating the producer of the year and songwriter of the...
In addition, The Academy has also moved the non-classical Producer of the Year and Songwriter of the Year categories to the general voting field, meaning that they are open to all Grammy voters. According to The Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr., the changes come as an attempt to show their “commitment to actively listen and respond” to criticism and suggestions from fans and fellow participants in the music community, as well as stay on top of burgeoning music scenes that “align with the ever-evolving musical landscape.”
“By introducing these three new categories, we are able to acknowledge and appreciate a broader array of artists — and relocating the producer of the year and songwriter of the...
- 6/13/2023
- by Cervanté Pope
- Consequence - Music
“I will never work on a more important film than this one,” declares Ken Burns of “The U.S. and the Holocaust,” the three-part, six-hour PBS film he co-produced and co-directed (with frequent collaborators Lynn Novick and Sarah Botstein) and released last September. Coming from Burns, that’s a mouthful, considering he is perhaps the most celebrated documentarian of our time and the foremost chronicler of the American experience. He’s a filmmaker who is responsible for many of the most treasured nonfiction series and biographies ever put to film, among them “The Civil War,” “Baseball,” “Jazz,” “Jackie Robinson” and “The Vietnam War.” A two-time Oscar nominee and five-time Emmy winner, Burns is without peer on the documentary production stage. And he is as proud of “U.S. and the Holocaust” as anything he’s ever done in his four-decade filmmaking career. Watch the exclusive video interview above.
What Burns – a...
What Burns – a...
- 5/2/2023
- by Ray Richmond
- Gold Derby
Origins is a recurring series that gives artists a space to break down everything that went into their latest release. Today, former CoSign McKinley Dixon takes us through the title track of his forthcoming album.
Chicago-based rapper McKinley Dixon reveals the majesty of his new album with its name alone: Beloved! Paradise! Jazz!? goes the title, with exclamation points that seem to say, “It’s that good, can you believe it?” and a concluding question mark that feels like a knowing wink and nudge. But it’s also a direct reference to Toni Morrison’s significant trilogy, and the album’s title track, which features Ms. Jaylin Brown, doubles down on the enveloping love that the title suggests.
Indeed, the former Consequence CoSign uses “Beloved! Paradise! Jazz!?” as a brand new thesis statement — one he calls “a familial affair in all senses.” Though it’s the title track and carries...
Chicago-based rapper McKinley Dixon reveals the majesty of his new album with its name alone: Beloved! Paradise! Jazz!? goes the title, with exclamation points that seem to say, “It’s that good, can you believe it?” and a concluding question mark that feels like a knowing wink and nudge. But it’s also a direct reference to Toni Morrison’s significant trilogy, and the album’s title track, which features Ms. Jaylin Brown, doubles down on the enveloping love that the title suggests.
Indeed, the former Consequence CoSign uses “Beloved! Paradise! Jazz!?” as a brand new thesis statement — one he calls “a familial affair in all senses.” Though it’s the title track and carries...
- 4/26/2023
- by Paolo Ragusa
- Consequence - Music
In our Q&a series Popsugar Crush, we get to know some of our favorite celebs' more intimate details - from their perfect date night to their best love advice. This month, we're crushing on "Bel-Air" star Jordan L. Jones.
It's pretty rare for actors to have the opportunity to work with their parents on screen. But in "Bel-Air"'s episode four of season two, star Jordan L. Jones got to do exactly that. "I think the greatest part is that my mom actually auditioned for this," Jones tells Popsugar of having his mother, Ptosha Storey, as a scene partner. In fact, she didn't even tell him about it until after the fact. "I was like, 'What the f*ck?' You got to tell a brother."
"What I didn't want to do is be like, 'Yeah, so my mom is getting this audition. I would love for her to play my mom.
It's pretty rare for actors to have the opportunity to work with their parents on screen. But in "Bel-Air"'s episode four of season two, star Jordan L. Jones got to do exactly that. "I think the greatest part is that my mom actually auditioned for this," Jones tells Popsugar of having his mother, Ptosha Storey, as a scene partner. In fact, she didn't even tell him about it until after the fact. "I was like, 'What the f*ck?' You got to tell a brother."
"What I didn't want to do is be like, 'Yeah, so my mom is getting this audition. I would love for her to play my mom.
- 4/7/2023
- by Njera Perkins
- Popsugar.com
Exclusive: Emmy-winning filmmaker Erika Dilday is joining Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon as co-director and co-producer of the upcoming documentary film Emancipation to Exodus (working title). It’s a long-term commitment – the film about a critical period in the African American experience isn’t expected to air on PBS until 2027.
Dilday’s participation in the project will be as an independent filmmaker – in other words, separate from her role as executive director of American Documentary and executive producer of AmDoc’s PBS series Pov and World Channel’s America ReFramed.
Emancipation to Exodus (wt) explores the African American struggle for freedom and opportunity “from the Civil War and end of slavery, through Reconstruction and the start of the Great Migration out of the south that began in the early 20th century,” according to a release about the film.
Erika Dilday at the IDA Documentary Awards on December 10, 2022 in Los Angeles.
Dilday’s participation in the project will be as an independent filmmaker – in other words, separate from her role as executive director of American Documentary and executive producer of AmDoc’s PBS series Pov and World Channel’s America ReFramed.
Emancipation to Exodus (wt) explores the African American struggle for freedom and opportunity “from the Civil War and end of slavery, through Reconstruction and the start of the Great Migration out of the south that began in the early 20th century,” according to a release about the film.
Erika Dilday at the IDA Documentary Awards on December 10, 2022 in Los Angeles.
- 4/6/2023
- by Matthew Carey
- Deadline Film + TV
Dmitri Shostakovich is one of the most acclaimed and respected composers in history.
His music is renowned for its emotional depth, its powerful emotive qualities, and its evocative instrumentation. His works are often considered to be some of the finest examples of classical music in the 20th century. They have been performed by many great orchestras throughout the world, as well as by smaller ensembles and soloists.
This article delves into the life and works of Dmitri Shostakovich, exploring his inspirations, influences and achievements. We will look at his most famous works such as his symphonies, his chamber music and his vocal compositions. Finally, we will discover some interesting facts about this great composer that you may not know.
Life and Music of Dmitri Shostakovich
Dmitri Shostakovich was one of the most influential and acclaimed composers of the 20th century. Born in 1906 in Saint Petersburg, Russia, Shostakovich was a musical...
His music is renowned for its emotional depth, its powerful emotive qualities, and its evocative instrumentation. His works are often considered to be some of the finest examples of classical music in the 20th century. They have been performed by many great orchestras throughout the world, as well as by smaller ensembles and soloists.
This article delves into the life and works of Dmitri Shostakovich, exploring his inspirations, influences and achievements. We will look at his most famous works such as his symphonies, his chamber music and his vocal compositions. Finally, we will discover some interesting facts about this great composer that you may not know.
Life and Music of Dmitri Shostakovich
Dmitri Shostakovich was one of the most influential and acclaimed composers of the 20th century. Born in 1906 in Saint Petersburg, Russia, Shostakovich was a musical...
- 3/24/2023
- by Music Martin Cid Magazine
- Martin Cid Music
Chris Licht may not have been the hottest celebrity sighting at Monday’s “Succession” Season 4 premiere — we’d go with Matthew Broderick supporting his “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” buddy Alan Ruck, aka Connor Roy — but he may have been the attendee on media’s hottest seat.
The screening and after-party for the final season of HBO’s brilliant media-empire drama was a thing of beauty. For starters, Episode 401 — the one we got to watch on Jazz at Lincoln Center’s big screen — was terrific. Read IndieWire’s review here. A jazz ensemble set the mood as we waited for fashionably late episode introductions from HBO boss Casey Bloys and “Succession” creator Jesse Armstrong. The blue-and-white branded M&Ms, the popcorn, and water bottles took the edge off.
All 26 cast members took a bow and received a semi-standing ovation. Then, we put our cell phones in flimsy “Succession”-branded clear plastic...
The screening and after-party for the final season of HBO’s brilliant media-empire drama was a thing of beauty. For starters, Episode 401 — the one we got to watch on Jazz at Lincoln Center’s big screen — was terrific. Read IndieWire’s review here. A jazz ensemble set the mood as we waited for fashionably late episode introductions from HBO boss Casey Bloys and “Succession” creator Jesse Armstrong. The blue-and-white branded M&Ms, the popcorn, and water bottles took the edge off.
All 26 cast members took a bow and received a semi-standing ovation. Then, we put our cell phones in flimsy “Succession”-branded clear plastic...
- 3/22/2023
- by Tony Maglio
- Indiewire
“Abbott Elementary” and “Top Gun: Maverick” received top honors at the 60th annual International Cinematographers Guild (Icg) Publicists Awards luncheon at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Friday.
The awards honor individual publicists, unit still photographers and entertainment journalists who further publicity campaigns for film and TV. Variety’s senior artisans editor Jazz Tangcay and senior entertainment reporter Angelique Jackson each earned nominations from Icg.
Quinta Brunson of “Abbott Elementary” received the TV showman of the year honor, and the producers of “Top Gun: Maverick” received the honor on the film side, with Bruckheimer accepting on behalf of all four.
In her speech, Brunson had the crowd laughing as she commended the role of publicists. “I didn’t know that this award show existed…but I’m happy that it does exist, because you all do a job that is incredible, crucial and underappreciated,” Brunson said. “It’s important to have publicists who understand the vision,...
The awards honor individual publicists, unit still photographers and entertainment journalists who further publicity campaigns for film and TV. Variety’s senior artisans editor Jazz Tangcay and senior entertainment reporter Angelique Jackson each earned nominations from Icg.
Quinta Brunson of “Abbott Elementary” received the TV showman of the year honor, and the producers of “Top Gun: Maverick” received the honor on the film side, with Bruckheimer accepting on behalf of all four.
In her speech, Brunson had the crowd laughing as she commended the role of publicists. “I didn’t know that this award show existed…but I’m happy that it does exist, because you all do a job that is incredible, crucial and underappreciated,” Brunson said. “It’s important to have publicists who understand the vision,...
- 3/10/2023
- by Julia MacCary
- Variety Film + TV
Visionary composer, saxophonist and visual artist Wayne Shorter has passed away at the age of 89.
His cause of death remains unknown, however the devoted husband, father and grandfather was surrounded by his loving family in Los Angeles at the time of his transition. He is survived by his wife Carolina, daughters Miyako and Mariana, and newly-born grandson Max.
Prior to his death, Shorter won his 13th Grammy award in February.
Read More: 2023 Grammy Awards: Complete Winners List
During the last few prolific years of his life, the extraordinary musician attained his opera …Iphigenia, written in collaboration with Esperanza Spalding, which played to widespread critical acclaim across the country in 2020, and released his Grammy-winning triple album and graphic novel Emanon in 2018.
“Wayne Shorter, my best friend, left us with courage in his heart, love and compassion for all, and a seeking spirit for the eternal future,” said Herbie Hancock, Shorter’s...
His cause of death remains unknown, however the devoted husband, father and grandfather was surrounded by his loving family in Los Angeles at the time of his transition. He is survived by his wife Carolina, daughters Miyako and Mariana, and newly-born grandson Max.
Prior to his death, Shorter won his 13th Grammy award in February.
Read More: 2023 Grammy Awards: Complete Winners List
During the last few prolific years of his life, the extraordinary musician attained his opera …Iphigenia, written in collaboration with Esperanza Spalding, which played to widespread critical acclaim across the country in 2020, and released his Grammy-winning triple album and graphic novel Emanon in 2018.
“Wayne Shorter, my best friend, left us with courage in his heart, love and compassion for all, and a seeking spirit for the eternal future,” said Herbie Hancock, Shorter’s...
- 3/2/2023
- by Melissa Romualdi
- ET Canada
Wayne Shorter, the skilled and innovative jazz saxophonist who was a member of Miles Davis’ Second Great Quintet before leading his own jazz-fusion band Weather Report, has died at the age of 89.
According to The New York Times, Shorter died Thursday, March 2nd, in Los Angeles.
Born on August 25th, 1933, in Newark, New Jersey, Shorter grew up in a musical family (his older brother Alan was a revered jazz trumpeter in his own right). Wayne began playing the clarinet at an early age before transitioning to saxophone.
Following a stint in the U.S. Army, Shorter moved to New York City in the 1950s and became an integral figure in the city’s vibrant jazz scene. He was a member of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers from 1959 to 1963, where he gained a reputation for his virtuosic saxophone playing and his ability to write complex and innovative compositions.
In 1964, Shorter joined the...
According to The New York Times, Shorter died Thursday, March 2nd, in Los Angeles.
Born on August 25th, 1933, in Newark, New Jersey, Shorter grew up in a musical family (his older brother Alan was a revered jazz trumpeter in his own right). Wayne began playing the clarinet at an early age before transitioning to saxophone.
Following a stint in the U.S. Army, Shorter moved to New York City in the 1950s and became an integral figure in the city’s vibrant jazz scene. He was a member of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers from 1959 to 1963, where he gained a reputation for his virtuosic saxophone playing and his ability to write complex and innovative compositions.
In 1964, Shorter joined the...
- 3/2/2023
- by Consequence Staff
- Consequence - Music
New York, NY — March 2, 2023 — The 92nd Street Y, New York (92Ny), one of New York’s leading cultural venues, presents Tetzlaff-Tetzlaff-Dörken Trio plays Schubert, Beethoven, and more, on March 28, 2023 at 7:30pm Et at the Kaufmann Concert Hall. The concert will also be available for viewing online for 72 hours from time of broadcast. Tickets for both the in-person and livestream options start at $25 and are available at 92ny.org/event/tetzlaff-tetzlaff-dorken-trio.
A brilliant trio of musicians – violinist Christian Tetzlaff, cellist Tanja Tetzlaff and pianist Kiveli Dörken – in a rare NYC engagement featuring one of Beethoven’s Opus 1 Trios, a Dvořák masterwork, and Schubert’s B-flat Major Trio.
Program:
Beethoven, Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3
Dvořák, Piano Trio No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 26
Schubert, Piano Trio in B-flat Major, D. 898
About the Artist
Comprised of violinist Christian Tetzlaff, cellist Tanja Tetzlaff and pianist Lars Vogt, the Tetzlaff/Tetzlaff/Vogt...
A brilliant trio of musicians – violinist Christian Tetzlaff, cellist Tanja Tetzlaff and pianist Kiveli Dörken – in a rare NYC engagement featuring one of Beethoven’s Opus 1 Trios, a Dvořák masterwork, and Schubert’s B-flat Major Trio.
Program:
Beethoven, Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3
Dvořák, Piano Trio No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 26
Schubert, Piano Trio in B-flat Major, D. 898
About the Artist
Comprised of violinist Christian Tetzlaff, cellist Tanja Tetzlaff and pianist Lars Vogt, the Tetzlaff/Tetzlaff/Vogt...
- 3/2/2023
- by Music Martin Cid Magazine
- Martin Cid Music
“Bel-Air” showrunner and executive producer Carla Banks-Waddles says the show’s writers got the messages loud and clear from fans and the cast about what they’d like to see for Season 2 – and those ideas are being weighed and considered.
Peacock’s most-watched original series is back with a fresh new season, and Banks-Waddles says a lot of the storylines in Season 2 were a mix of writers’ ideas and what fans reacted to from Season 1.
“I think it was a combination of knowing the conversations we were having in Season 1,” Banks-Waddles told TheWrap. “[Writers] were like, ‘Oh, maybe that’s something to look harder at. What’s that storyline?’ People really loved Jazz and Hillary in Season 1. What is Uncle Phil doing now that he quit the D.A. race in Season 1? What was he doing before he did that? Just being able to organically look at everybody’s story, and...
Peacock’s most-watched original series is back with a fresh new season, and Banks-Waddles says a lot of the storylines in Season 2 were a mix of writers’ ideas and what fans reacted to from Season 1.
“I think it was a combination of knowing the conversations we were having in Season 1,” Banks-Waddles told TheWrap. “[Writers] were like, ‘Oh, maybe that’s something to look harder at. What’s that storyline?’ People really loved Jazz and Hillary in Season 1. What is Uncle Phil doing now that he quit the D.A. race in Season 1? What was he doing before he did that? Just being able to organically look at everybody’s story, and...
- 2/23/2023
- by Raquel "Rocky" Harris
- The Wrap
Director Sacha Jenkins does the most important thing he could do in “Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues”: He lets Louis Armstrong be messy.
Armstrong is one of those legends about whom people have had strong, polarized opinions. He’s either the greatest artist of the 20th century, in the esteem of Robert Christgau or Wynton Marsalis. Or he’s an Uncle Tom, someone who sold out and pandered to white audiences, as Sammy Davis Jr. once thought. And of course there’s the third path of corporate America, to sand the edges of someone like Armstrong down until he’s a cuddly teddy bear whose “What a Wonderful World” stands ready to accompany any commercial.
Jenkins’ new documentary for Apple TV+ avoids those absolutes. He’s interested in the man who was Armstrong, and that means a more complete, nuanced picture — a portrait of a human not so easy to categorize.
Armstrong is one of those legends about whom people have had strong, polarized opinions. He’s either the greatest artist of the 20th century, in the esteem of Robert Christgau or Wynton Marsalis. Or he’s an Uncle Tom, someone who sold out and pandered to white audiences, as Sammy Davis Jr. once thought. And of course there’s the third path of corporate America, to sand the edges of someone like Armstrong down until he’s a cuddly teddy bear whose “What a Wonderful World” stands ready to accompany any commercial.
Jenkins’ new documentary for Apple TV+ avoids those absolutes. He’s interested in the man who was Armstrong, and that means a more complete, nuanced picture — a portrait of a human not so easy to categorize.
- 9/9/2022
- by Christian Blauvelt
- Indiewire
Hey, "Atlanta" fans. We hope you guys totally enjoyed what episode 7 put down tonight. Now that episode 7 has officially made its debut appearance, we are on here to give you guys a little bit of an idea of what the next, new episode 8 of Atlanta's current season 3 will be serving up when it arrives next Thursday night, May 5, 2022. We were able to get our hands on a very vague and small teaser description for one of episode 8's main storylines via FX's official episode 8 press release. So, we're going to read over it, right now, and see what we can find out. First thing's first. FX revealed that this new episode 8 of Atlanta's current season 3 does have an official title attached to it. The writers are calling it, "New Jazz." It sounds like episode 8 will feature some possible interesting, dramatic and funny scenes.
- 4/28/2022
- by Eric
- OnTheFlix
This The Simpsons review contains spoilers.
The Simpsons Season 33 Episode 17
Lisa almost learns a lesson on The Simpsons’ “The Sound of Bleeding Gums.” When the Springfield lottery uses a song from local saxophone legend Bleeding Gums Murphy in their commercials, Lisa decides to help her musical idol’s son Monk, played by John Autry II, by any means possible.
Once again, the writers are talking about the show, and how The Simpsons are cited for social justice warrior product placements at the expense of laughs. Homer nails the criticism on the head, advising Lisa not to try to save anyone or anything, and making her promise not to waste her time on lost causes. Like the lottery, there are no winners.
The self-referential setup climaxes with a gag showing 3-second versions of old cartoons which are now politically incorrect. This, and a bit about airing shows even Peacock rejected, pre-cancels cancel culture,...
The Simpsons Season 33 Episode 17
Lisa almost learns a lesson on The Simpsons’ “The Sound of Bleeding Gums.” When the Springfield lottery uses a song from local saxophone legend Bleeding Gums Murphy in their commercials, Lisa decides to help her musical idol’s son Monk, played by John Autry II, by any means possible.
Once again, the writers are talking about the show, and how The Simpsons are cited for social justice warrior product placements at the expense of laughs. Homer nails the criticism on the head, advising Lisa not to try to save anyone or anything, and making her promise not to waste her time on lost causes. Like the lottery, there are no winners.
The self-referential setup climaxes with a gag showing 3-second versions of old cartoons which are now politically incorrect. This, and a bit about airing shows even Peacock rejected, pre-cancels cancel culture,...
- 4/11/2022
- by Alec Bojalad
- Den of Geek
It wasn’t a good sign that Zoey agreed so quickly to go with Aaron to South Africa on Thursday night’s grown-ish.
When her on-again boo asked Zoey when she would tell her dad, Dre, Zoey said she would do so after the plane landed in Johannesburg, and the pair giggled like naughty children. Making matters more problematic, Zoey decided to interrupt Aaron’s farewell speech at his going away party by announcing she was going with him. This news shocked and disappointed her friends, especially Jazz and Nomi, who wondered why she was putting her fashion dreams with...
When her on-again boo asked Zoey when she would tell her dad, Dre, Zoey said she would do so after the plane landed in Johannesburg, and the pair giggled like naughty children. Making matters more problematic, Zoey decided to interrupt Aaron’s farewell speech at his going away party by announcing she was going with him. This news shocked and disappointed her friends, especially Jazz and Nomi, who wondered why she was putting her fashion dreams with...
- 3/18/2022
- by Mekeisha Madden Toby
- TVLine.com
It’s a big deal when multi-hyphenate Shawn Carter — better known as Jay-Z — makes an appearance pretty much anywhere — and his presence at a Q&a at Hollywood’s Neuehouse on Tuesday night, moderated by Variety‘s Jazz Tangcay, was a really big deal.
Carter, who served as a producer on Netflix’s “The Harder They Fall,” was at the event to talk about his collaboration with friend and director/composer Jeymes Samuel.
Jay-Z, Jeymes and Jazz. Had the honor of moderating this Q&a tonight #TheHarderTheyFall pic.twitter.com/33gAqIz62N
— Jazz Tangcay (@jazzt) December 15, 2021
A fully-vaxxed and tested crowd of AMPAS voters and members of the music branch packed into the screening room as Carter explained how first-time director Samuel — who also goes by The Bullitts — spent over a decade going through different iterations of the film, which stars Regina King, Jonathan Majors, Lakeith Stanfield and Idris Elba.
Carter, who served as a producer on Netflix’s “The Harder They Fall,” was at the event to talk about his collaboration with friend and director/composer Jeymes Samuel.
Jay-Z, Jeymes and Jazz. Had the honor of moderating this Q&a tonight #TheHarderTheyFall pic.twitter.com/33gAqIz62N
— Jazz Tangcay (@jazzt) December 15, 2021
A fully-vaxxed and tested crowd of AMPAS voters and members of the music branch packed into the screening room as Carter explained how first-time director Samuel — who also goes by The Bullitts — spent over a decade going through different iterations of the film, which stars Regina King, Jonathan Majors, Lakeith Stanfield and Idris Elba.
- 12/15/2021
- by Jazz Tangcay
- Variety Film + TV
On Dec. 5, the cast of Netflix’s Don’t Look Up converged on the stage of Jazz at Lincoln Center for the film’s glitzy world premiere. With stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence and Meryl Streep looking on, director Adam McKay recalled the night of March 11, 2020, when everything changed. “We were in Boston [in preproduction], and I’ll never forget that night because there was an NBA game with the Jazz, and they just shut the game down, and from that point on our lives were never the same again,” McKay said from the stage.
Nearly two years later, Hollywood is ...
Nearly two years later, Hollywood is ...
- 12/8/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
On Dec. 5, the cast of Netflix’s Don’t Look Up converged on the stage of Jazz at Lincoln Center for the film’s glitzy world premiere. With stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence and Meryl Streep looking on, director Adam McKay recalled the night of March 11, 2020, when everything changed. “We were in Boston [in preproduction], and I’ll never forget that night because there was an NBA game with the Jazz, and they just shut the game down, and from that point on our lives were never the same again,” McKay said from the stage.
Nearly two years later, Hollywood is ...
Nearly two years later, Hollywood is ...
- 12/8/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Taking place on a Thursday morning in late October at the Gutstein Gallery (or online for pass-holders who didn’t care to brave the rain), the Wonder Women: Below the Line panel at this year’s Scad Savannah Film Festival (October 23-30) felt like a breath of fresh air. Moderated by Variety’s Jazz Tangcay, the participants included talent agent June Dowad, editor Pamela Martin, and production designers Diane Lederman and Ina Mayhew: All fiercely self-assured, middle-aged women with a wealth of […]
The post The Scad Savannah Film Festival presents Wonder Women: Below the Line first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post The Scad Savannah Film Festival presents Wonder Women: Below the Line first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 11/15/2021
- by Lauren Wissot
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
A couple of pointed questions underpin filmmaker Grace Lee’s new podcast, Viewers Like Us: as she frames it in episode 1, “Why is PBS so white and how exactly did it designate Ken Burns as America’s Storyteller?”
The questions are linked, asserts Lee, whose directing and producing credits number a dozen documentaries, some of which have aired on PBS, including the 2020 docuseries Asian Americans. While she acknowledges the public broadcaster has afforded some opportunities to filmmakers of color, she says it’s nothing on the order of the resources lavished on Burns, director of The Civil War (1990), Jazz (2001) and many other PBS documentary series, including two this year alone: the six-hour long Hemingway and the eight-hour Muhammad Ali.
“His hundreds of hours of primetime programming are products of a system,” Lee charges in the podcast, “that for decades has prioritized his worldview at the expense of storytellers of color.
The questions are linked, asserts Lee, whose directing and producing credits number a dozen documentaries, some of which have aired on PBS, including the 2020 docuseries Asian Americans. While she acknowledges the public broadcaster has afforded some opportunities to filmmakers of color, she says it’s nothing on the order of the resources lavished on Burns, director of The Civil War (1990), Jazz (2001) and many other PBS documentary series, including two this year alone: the six-hour long Hemingway and the eight-hour Muhammad Ali.
“His hundreds of hours of primetime programming are products of a system,” Lee charges in the podcast, “that for decades has prioritized his worldview at the expense of storytellers of color.
- 10/14/2021
- by Matthew Carey
- Deadline Film + TV
Ken Burns, a PBS mainstay and award-winning documentarian, has responded to criticism around his relationship with the public broadcaster and diversity within the larger documentary community.
Speaking to The New York Times Sway podcast host Kara Swisher for an episode titled, “Is Ken Burns Taking Up Too Much Space?” the creator of popular documentaries Baseball, Jazz, The Civil War and the upcoming Muhammad Ali documentary responded to criticisms around white documentarians like himself being the arbiters of narratives around Black figures. Burns defended his work on projects like Jazz and his latest doc focused on the famous boxer and activist, arguing that as someone who explores ...
Speaking to The New York Times Sway podcast host Kara Swisher for an episode titled, “Is Ken Burns Taking Up Too Much Space?” the creator of popular documentaries Baseball, Jazz, The Civil War and the upcoming Muhammad Ali documentary responded to criticisms around white documentarians like himself being the arbiters of narratives around Black figures. Burns defended his work on projects like Jazz and his latest doc focused on the famous boxer and activist, arguing that as someone who explores ...
Ken Burns, a PBS mainstay and award-winning documentarian, has responded to criticism around his relationship with the public broadcaster and diversity within the larger documentary community.
Speaking to The New York Times Sway podcast host Kara Swisher for an episode titled, “Is Ken Burns Taking Up Too Much Space?” the creator of popular documentaries Baseball, Jazz, The Civil War and the upcoming Muhammad Ali documentary responded to criticisms around white documentarians like himself being the arbiters of narratives around Black figures. Burns defended his work on projects like Jazz and his latest doc focused on the famous boxer and activist, arguing that as someone who explores ...
Speaking to The New York Times Sway podcast host Kara Swisher for an episode titled, “Is Ken Burns Taking Up Too Much Space?” the creator of popular documentaries Baseball, Jazz, The Civil War and the upcoming Muhammad Ali documentary responded to criticisms around white documentarians like himself being the arbiters of narratives around Black figures. Burns defended his work on projects like Jazz and his latest doc focused on the famous boxer and activist, arguing that as someone who explores ...
There is something about jail that really brings out the best… or the worst… in people.
A bit of both happened to grown-ish‘s Zoey and Aaron after the newlyweds got arrested while vacationing in Mexico in the Season 4 opener. And this Thursday night, fans got to see what happened after the two got detained, in the Episode 2 installment titled “Drunk in Love.”
More from TVLinegrown-ish's Francia Raisa Unpacks Ana and Javi's Chlamydia Argument (and the Personal Anger She Channeled)grown-ish Season 4 Premiere Recap: Did [Spoiler] Actually Tie the Knot?grown-ish's Chloe Bailey Stands Alone Against Team Good Trouble -- Watch...
A bit of both happened to grown-ish‘s Zoey and Aaron after the newlyweds got arrested while vacationing in Mexico in the Season 4 opener. And this Thursday night, fans got to see what happened after the two got detained, in the Episode 2 installment titled “Drunk in Love.”
More from TVLinegrown-ish's Francia Raisa Unpacks Ana and Javi's Chlamydia Argument (and the Personal Anger She Channeled)grown-ish Season 4 Premiere Recap: Did [Spoiler] Actually Tie the Knot?grown-ish's Chloe Bailey Stands Alone Against Team Good Trouble -- Watch...
- 7/16/2021
- by Mekeisha Madden Toby
- TVLine.com
“I Am Jazz” has been renewed for Season 7 at TLC, Variety has learned exclusively.
Starring trans activist Jazz Jennings, TLC’s reality series premiered in 2015 as a 14 year-old Jennings prepared to go to high school, and wrapped its sixth season in March 2020 with her graduation as valedictorian. Over the years, viewers have watched Jennings, who became the youngest trans child on television after her 2007 “20/20” interview with Barbara Walters, deal with school, sports, dating and her health as she moved forward with her transition.
Season 6 saw Jennings helping a friend raise money for her gender confirmation surgery, manage her anxiety, and try to decide between attending Pomona College or Harvard University after high school. After a two-year break in filming, the longest in the show’s history, production on the seventh season will begin this summer in South Florida where Jennings currently lives with her family.
“Alongside viewers and fans,...
Starring trans activist Jazz Jennings, TLC’s reality series premiered in 2015 as a 14 year-old Jennings prepared to go to high school, and wrapped its sixth season in March 2020 with her graduation as valedictorian. Over the years, viewers have watched Jennings, who became the youngest trans child on television after her 2007 “20/20” interview with Barbara Walters, deal with school, sports, dating and her health as she moved forward with her transition.
Season 6 saw Jennings helping a friend raise money for her gender confirmation surgery, manage her anxiety, and try to decide between attending Pomona College or Harvard University after high school. After a two-year break in filming, the longest in the show’s history, production on the seventh season will begin this summer in South Florida where Jennings currently lives with her family.
“Alongside viewers and fans,...
- 6/2/2021
- by Caroline Framke
- Variety Film + TV
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