#Peter James Haworth
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Paul McCartney on Sgt. Pepper. Photos by Michael Cooper
(transcribed below)
I came up with the title and went to Robert with some drawings for the idea of the cover. I had come to the conclusion that The Beatles were getting a little bit safe, and we were a little intimidated by the idea of making 'the new Beatles album.' It was quite a big thing: "Wow, follow that!" So to relieve the pressure I got the idea, maybe from some from friends or something I'd read, that we shouldn't record it as The Beatles.
Mentally we should approach it as another group of people and totally give ourselves alter egos. So I came up with the idea of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and the song 'It was Twenty Years Ago Today', and I started mentioning this to Robert in our late-night talks.
The original concept was actually a little bit different from how it turned out. I'd always liked those floral clocks that they have at seaside towns; they have a little green bank and put flowers in the shape of a clock. The original idea was that it was going to be a presentation from the Mayor of Middlesbrough or somewhere. There'd be this floral bank and there'd be us there and then at other parts of the cover we were going to have all the band's heroes--they were going to be on a photo, maybe behind the wall or something.
So there were these two ideas that eventually got pushed into one and then I said to everyone, 'OK, who are your favourites?" Marlon Brando was one of the first choices, and James Dean, Monroe--all those obvious ones and then other suggestions started to come in. George came up with all the Hindus, Babaji was his, and then there were things like footballers from our youth, you know, we had little joke things--Albert Stubbins--he's a footballer and so he was in and then it kind of snowballed.
I took all these ideas, the floral clock, the kind of presentation by a mayor, these heroes of ours, and Robert and I went with them to Peter Blake. Peter had all these sculptures of little people around, because he was married to Jann Haworth at the time and Jann was doing all those surfers and things like John Betjeman as a teddy bear and all that, so they crept in there.
The famous flowers that started off as the floral clock then became a guitar and the word 'Beatles'--they weren't marijuana leaves, they just looked like them--and so the Americans thought "Wow, well, this is it, it's all happening." We started shooting the cover and people would say, "Oh, can I come, can I come?" and we let more or less everyone come along, but eventually it got to the point where we had to say, "That's enough!"
So Robert would get all this and he'd show all the Indian stuff to George; and there'd be H.G. Wells and Johnny Weissmuller, Issy Bonn and all those people, and Burroughs would have been a suggestion probably from Robert, and there were a few kind of LA guys that Robert had slipped in. He'd slip in people that we didn't even know but we didn't mind, it was the spirit of the thing.
I don't know how many nights Michael spent on it but we were only there for that one night, the last night. They did all this without us. It was very nice when we turned up and it was all done, but not as impressive as when I saw the cover; just actually looking at the set wasn't as impressive as seeing the finished cover.
Jesus and Hitler were on John's favourites list but they had to be taken off. John was that kind of guy but you couldn't very well have Hitler and so he had to go. Gandhi also had to go because the head of EMI, Sir Joe Lockwood, said that in India they wouldn't allow the record to be printed. We said "You're kidding, they'll love it," but he said no, so that was something the lawyers made us take off. There were a few people who just went by the wayside.
We went to Burman's, the theatrical costumiers, to have all our outfits made up and the Stones did the same for the Satanic Majesties album.
It was great. The main centrefold was originally going to be a drawing by The Fool--Simon Posthuma and Marijke Koger, Dutch artists who'd produced some surrealistic work. They depicted us all up in the clouds and it was all very very acid, everything everywhere, lots of colours--but Robert didn't like it as art and so he vetoed it. We said "No man, it's really good. We love it, we love it."
The shoes were made by Anello and David, which was the first place we came into contact with, and we got our lovely handmade Beatle boots there.
Robert and I went down to Peter's house and Peter developed it all from there. The lists were his idea, and all the cut-outs instead of using real people, and then the floral clock got changed around; but basically it was the original theme.
The 'Welcome The Rolling Stones' was something they put in. They sort of asked us if we minded and we said, "No, no, not at all." Peter organized a fairground painter to paint the drum as that was someone that he used to hang out with.
From Blinds & Shutters
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Burke’s Law - List of Guest Stars
The Special Guest Stars of “Burke’s Law” read like a Who’s Who list of Hollywood of the era. Many of the appearances, however, were no more than one scene cameos. This is as complete a list ever compiled of all those who even made the briefest of appearances on the series.
Beverly Adams, Nick Adams, Stanley Adams, Eddie Albert, Mabel Albertson, Lola Albright, Elizabeth Allen, June Allyson, Don Ameche, Michael Ansara, Army Archerd, Phil Arnold, Mary Astor, Frankie Avalon, Hy Averback, Jim Backus, Betty Barry, Susan Bay, Ed Begley, William Bendix, Joan Bennett, Edgar Bergen, Shelley Berman, Herschel Bernardi, Ken Berry, Lyle Bettger, Robert Bice, Theodore Bikel, Janet Blair, Madge Blake, Joan Blondell, Ann Blyth, Carl Boehm, Peter Bourne, Rosemarie Bowe, Eddie Bracken, Steve Brodie, Jan Brooks, Dorian Brown, Bobby Buntrock, Edd Byrnes, Corinne Calvet, Rory Calhoun, Pepe Callahan, Rod Cameron, Macdonald Carey, Hoagy Carmichael, Richard Carlson, Jack Carter, Steve Carruthers, Marianna Case, Seymour Cassel, John Cassavetes, Tom Cassidy, Joan Caulfield, Barrie Chase, Eduardo Ciannelli, Dane Clark, Dick Clark, Steve Cochran, Hans Conried, Jackie Coogan, Gladys Cooper, Henry Corden, Wendell Corey, Hazel Court, Wally Cox, Jeanne Crain, Susanne Cramer, Les Crane, Broderick Crawford, Suzanne Cupito, Arlene Dahl, Vic Dana, Jane Darwell, Sammy Davis Jr., Linda Darnell, Dennis Day, Laraine Day, Yvonne DeCarlo, Gloria De Haven, William Demarest, Andy Devine, Richard Devon, Billy De Wolfe, Don Diamond, Diana Dors, Joanne Dru, Paul Dubov, Howard Duff, Dan Duryea, Robert Easton, Barbara Eden, John Ericson, Leif Erickson, Tom Ewell, Nanette Fabray, Felicia Farr, Sharon Farrell, Herbie Faye, Fritz Feld, Susan Flannery, James Flavin, Rhonda Fleming, Nina Foch, Steve Forrest, Linda Foster, Byron Foulger, Eddie Foy Jr., Anne Francis, David Fresco, Annette Funicello, Eva Gabor, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Reginald Gardiner, Nancy Gates, Lisa Gaye, Sandra Giles, Mark Goddard, Thomas Gomez, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Sandra Gould, Wilton Graff, Gloria Grahame, Shelby Grant, Jane Greer, Virginia Grey, Tammy Grimes, Richard Hale, Jack Haley, George Hamilton, Ann Harding, Joy Harmon, Phil Harris, Stacy Harris, Dee Hartford, June Havoc, Jill Haworth, Richard Haydn, Louis Hayward, Hugh Hefner, Anne Helm, Percy Helton, Irene Hervey, Joe Higgins, Marianna Hill, Bern Hoffman, Jonathan Hole, Celeste Holm, Charlene Holt, Oscar Homolka, Barbara Horne, Edward Everett Horton, Breena Howard, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Arthur Hunnicutt, Tab Hunter, Joan Huntington, Josephine Hutchinson, Betty Hutton, Gunilla Hutton, Martha Hyer, Diana Hyland, Marty Ingels, John Ireland, Mako Iwamatsu, Joyce Jameson, Glynis Johns, I. Stanford Jolley, Carolyn Jones, Dean Jones, Spike Jones, Victor Jory, Jackie Joseph, Stubby Kaye, Monica Keating, Buster Keaton, Cecil Kellaway, Claire Kelly, Patsy Kelly, Kathy Kersh, Eartha Kitt, Nancy Kovack, Fred Krone, Lou Krugman, Frankie Laine, Fernando Lamas, Dorothy Lamour, Elsa Lanchester, Abbe Lane, Charles Lane, Lauren Lane, Harry Lauter, Norman Leavitt, Gypsy Rose Lee, Ruta Lee, Teri Lee, Peter Leeds, Margaret Leighton, Sheldon Leonard, Art Lewis, Buddy Lewis, Dave Loring, Joanne Ludden, Ida Lupino, Tina Louise, Paul Lynde, Diana Lynn, James MacArthur, Gisele MacKenzie, Diane McBain, Kevin McCarthy, Bill McClean, Stephen McNally, Elizabeth MacRae, Jayne Mansfield, Hal March, Shary Marshall, Dewey Martin, Marlyn Mason, Hedley Mattingly, Marilyn Maxwell, Virginia Mayo, Patricia Medina, Troy Melton, Burgess Meredith, Una Merkel, Dina Merrill, Torben Meyer, Barbara Michaels, Robert Middleton, Vera Miles, Sal Mineo, Mary Ann Mobley, Alan Mowbray, Ricardo Montalbán, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ralph Moody, Alvy Moore, Terry Moore, Agnes Moorehead, Anne Morell, Rita Moreno, Byron Morrow, Jan Murray, Ken Murray, George Nader, J. Carrol Naish, Bek Nelson, Gene Nelson, David Niven, Chris Noel, Kathleen Nolan, Sheree North, Louis Nye, Arthur O'Connell, Quinn O'Hara, Susan Oliver, Debra Paget, Janis Paige, Nestor Paiva, Luciana Paluzzi, Julie Parrish, Fess Parker, Suzy Parker, Bert Parks, Harvey Parry, Hank Patterson, Joan Patrick, Nehemiah Persoff, Walter Pidgeon, Zasu Pitts, Edward Platt, Juliet Prowse, Eddie Quillan, Louis Quinn, Basil Rathbone, Aldo Ray, Martha Raye, Gene Raymond, Peggy Rea, Philip Reed, Carl Reiner, Stafford Repp, Paul Rhone, Paul Richards, Don Rickles, Will Rogers Jr., Ruth Roman, Cesar Romero, Mickey Rooney, Gena Rowlands, Charlie Ruggles, Janice Rule, Soupy Sales, Hugh Sanders, Tura Satana, Telly Savalas, John Saxon, Lizabeth Scott, Lisa Seagram, Pilar Seurat, William Shatner, Karen Sharpe, James Shigeta, Nina Shipman, Susan Silo, Johnny Silver, Nancy Sinatra, The Smothers Brothers, Joanie Sommers, Joan Staley, Jan Sterling, Elaine Stewart, Jill St. John, Dean Stockwell, Gale Storm, Susan Strasberg, Inger Stratton, Amzie Strickland, Gil Stuart, Grady Sutton, Kay Sutton, Gloria Swanson, Russ Tamblyn. Don Taylor, Dub Taylor, Vaughn Taylor, Irene Tedrow, Terry-Thomas, Ginny Tiu, Dan Tobin, Forrest Tucker, Tom Tully, Jim Turley, Lurene Tuttle, Ann Tyrrell, Miyoshi Umeki, Mamie van Doren, Deborah Walley, Sandra Warner, David Wayne, Ray Weaver, Lennie Weinrib, Dawn Wells, Delores Wells, Rebecca Welles, Jack Weston, David White, James Whitmore, Michael Wilding, Annazette Williams, Dave Willock, Chill Wills, Marie Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sandra Wirth, Ed Wynn, Keenan Wynn, Dana Wynter, Celeste Yarnall, Francine York.
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Defenders of Earth! | The Collection: Season 9 Announcement Trailer | Doctor Who
Jo Jones - defender of ALL life on Earth! 🌍 #DoctorWho: The Collection returns with the Third Doctor's third season as the next instalment - find out more here ➡️ https://bbc.in/3HvHdsq
CREDITS
Jo Jones - Katy Manning
Alex - Isabelle Palmer
Kat - Julia Haworth
Sea Devil - Hal Townsend
Junior - Mike Tucker
Filmed on location at Redcliffe Caves and Clevedon
Thanks To: Lee Binding | Peter Crocker | Julie Martin
Runner - Ellie Collins
Location Managers - Alex Moore, Andrew Stocker
Creature Costume - Philip Robinson
Make-up - Kate Lockwood Cowell
Title Sequence - Bernard Lodge, Rob Ritchie
CGI Artist - Chris Thompson
VFX Designer - Mike Tucker
DIT/Camera Assistant - James Dalby
Sound Recordist - Adam Tavner
Dubbing Mixer - Mark Ayres
Camera - Paul Vanezis
Director of Photography - Matt Patrick
Executive Producers - Pete McTighe, Russell Minton
BBC Studios 2023
The third season for Jon Pertwee's Third Doctor is the next release to come to Blu-ray with Season 9.
Pre-order DOCTOR WHO: THE COLLECTION - SEASON 9 from Amazon, Zavvi and Rarewaves in the UK, and Amazon in the US ahead of its release on the 20th March.
Across an action-packed twenty-six episodes, the Doctor and Jo (Katy Manning) face off against Daleks, Ogrons, Sea Devils, Ice Warriors, Mutants and their old enemy the Master (Roger Delgado). Joining them in their adventures are the UNIT team of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart (Nicholas Courtney), Captain Yates (Richard Franklin) and Sergeant Benton (John Levene).
All episodes have been newly remastered from the best available sources – these classic adventures have never looked or sounded so good on home media.
The Collection: Season 9 Blu-ray box set also includes extensive special features including:
MAKING THE TIME MONSTER Looking back on the Season 9 finale with Katy Manning, John Levene and more.
MICHAEL E BRIANT AT THE HELM A profile of director Michael E Briant.
LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION Katy Manning and friends revisit the filming locations of Season 9.
THE FELL GUY A profile of prolific stuntman Stuart Fell.
BEHIND THE SOFA Five new Behind the Sofa episodes featuring Katy Manning (Jo), Peter Davison (The Fifth Doctor), Wendy Padbury (Zoe), Sarah Sutton (Nyssa), Janet Fielding (Tegan), Sophie Aldred (Ace) and director Michael E Briant.
BLU-RAY TRAILER A brand new slice of classic Doctor Who.
MOVIE-LENGTH EDITIONS Special repeat screenings of DAY OF THE DALEKS and THE SEA DEVILS, previously unavailable.
CONVENTION FOOTAGE A chance to hear from UNIT’s Nicholas Courtney and Richard Franklin, recorded in 1986.
5.1 SURROUND & DOLBY ATMOS SOUND On THE SEA DEVILS (episodic and omnibus edition).
HD PHOTO GALLERIES Including many previously unseen images.
AUDIO ARCHIVE Featuring many unreleased gems.
INFO TEXT Behind-the-scenes information and trivia on every episode.
PDF ARCHIVE Including scripts, exclusive unseen BBC production files and other rarities.
And loads more!
This eight-disc box set also includes hours of special features previously released on DVD including Documentaries, Featurettes, Audio Commentaries, Day Of The Daleks Special Edition and more.
Doctor Who: The Collection – Season 9 includes the following stories from 1972:
DAY OF THE DALEKS
THE CURSE OF PELADON
THE SEA DEVILS
THE MUTANTS
THE TIME MONSTER
#youtube#Doctor Who#TARDIS#Katy Manning#Jo Jones#Cliff Jones#Stewart Bevan#John Levene#Stuart Fell#Jon Pertwee#Richard Franklin#Nicholas Courtney#Sophie Aldred#Wendy Padbury#Janet Fielding#Sarah Sutton#BBC Studios#Pete McTighe#Peter Davison#Ice Warriors
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Décembre MMXXIII
Films
Chef (2014) de Jon Favreau avec Scarlett Johansson, Jon Favreau, Sofía Vergara, Emjay Anthony, John Leguizamo, Robert Downey Jr. et Dustin Hoffman
Y a-t-il un flic pour sauver Hollywood ? (The Naked gun 33⅓: The Final Insult) (1994) de Peter Segal avec Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, George Kennedy, Fred Ward, O. J. Simpson, Anna Nicole Smith, Kathleen Freeman, Ellen Greene et Ed Williams
Quai des Orfèvres (1947) de Henri-Georges Clouzot avec Louis Jouvet, Simone Renant, Bernard Blier, Suzy Delair, Pierre Larquey, Claudine Dupuis, Henri Arius, Charles Blavette, René Blancard et Robert Dalban
Maintenant, on l'appelle Plata (…più forte ragazzi!) (1972) de Giuseppe Colizzi avec Terence Hill, Bud Spencer, Cyril Cusack, Reinhard Kolldehoff, Riccardo Pizzuti, Ferdinando Murolo et Marcello Verziera
Moi, Michel G., milliardaire, maître du monde (2011) de Stéphane Kazandjian avec François-Xavier Demaison, Laurent Lafitte, Laurence Arné, Xavier de Guillebon, Guy Bedos, Patrick Bouchitey e Alain Doutey
Noël blanc (White Christmas) (1954) de Michael Curtiz avec Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera Ellen, Dean Jagger, Mary Wickes et John Bascia
Rendez-vous avec la mort (Appointment with Death) (1988) de Michael Winner avec Peter Ustinov, Lauren Bacall, Carrie Fisher, John Gielgud, Piper Laurie, Hayley Mills, Jenny Seagrove et David Soul
Bridget Jones : L’Âge de raison (Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason) (2004) de Beeban Kidron avec Renée Zellweger, Colin Firth, Hugh Grant, Gemma Jones, Jim Broadbent, Jacinda Barrett, Shirley Henderson et Sally Phillips
Les Trois Mousquetaires : Milady (2023) de Martin Bourboulon avec François Civil, Vincent Cassel, Romain Duris, Pio Marmaï, Eva Green, Lyna Khoudri et Louis Garrel
Y a-t-il un flic pour sauver le président ? (1991) (The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear) de David Zucker avec Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, George Kennedy, O. J. Simpson, Robert Goulet, Richard Griffiths, Anthony James et Jacqueline Brookes
Wallace et Gromit : Le Mystère du lapin-garou (Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit) (2005) de Nick Park et Steve Box avec Jean-Loup Horwitz, Jeanne Savary, Philippe Catoire, Frédérique Cantrel, Patrick Messe et Mireille Delcroix
Rivière sans retour (River of No Return) (1954) de Otto Preminger avec Robert Mitchum, Marilyn Monroe, Rory Calhoun, Tommy Rettig, Murvyn Vye et Douglas Spencer
L'Ange de Noël (Christmas Magic) (2011) de John Bradshaw avec Lindy Booth, Paul McGillion, Derek McGrath, Kiara Glasco, Teresa Pavlinek et Tricia Braun
Joyeux Noël (2005) de Christian Carion avec Benno Fürmann, Guillaume Canet, Diane Kruger, Gary Lewis, Daniel Brühl, Dany Boon, Lucas Belvaux, Bernard Le Coq et Alex Ferns
L'Assassinat du père Noël (1941) de Christian-Jaque avec Harry Baur, Raymond Rouleau, Renée Faure, Marie-Hélène Dasté, Robert Le Vigan, Fernand Ledoux et Jean Brochard
Danse avec les loups (Dances with Wolves) (1990) de et avec Kevin Costner ainsi que Mary McDonnell, Graham Greene, Rodney A. Grant, Floyd Westerman, Jimmy Herman, Nathan Lee, Tantoo Cardinal et Wes Studi
Noël en trois actes (Christmas Encore) (2017) de Bradley Walsh avec Maggie Lawson, Brennan Elliott, Art Hindle, Tracey Hoyt, Mercedes de la Zerda, Mika Amonsen, Sherry Miller, Sabryn Rock, David Tompa et Erin Agostino
La Souffleuse de verre (Die Glasbläserin) (2016) de Christiane Balthasar avec Luise Heyer, Maria Ehrich, Franz Dinda, Dirk Borchardt, Robert Gwisdek, Max Hopp et Ute Willing
Le père Noël est une ordure (1982) de Jean-Marie Poiré avec Anémone, Thierry Lhermitte, Gérard Jugnot, Marie-Anne Chazel, Christian Clavier, Josiane Balasko et Bruno Moynot
Le Lion en hiver (The Lion in Winter) (1968) de Anthony Harvey avec Peter O'Toole, Katharine Hepburn, Anthony Hopkins, John Castle, Nigel Terry, Timothy Dalton, Jane Merrow et Nigel Stock
Les Mystères de Paris (1962) d'André Hunebelle avec Jean Marais, Raymond Pellegrin, Jill Haworth, Dany Robin, Pierre Mondy, Georges Chamarat, Noël Roquevert et Jean Le Poulain
Derrick contre Superman (1992) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Patrick Burgel et Évelyne Grandjean
La Classe américaine : Le Grand Détournement (1993) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Christine Delaroche, Evelyne Grandjean, Marc Cassot, Patrick Guillemin, Raymond Loyer, Joël Martineau, Jean-Claude Montalban, Roger Rudel et Gérard Rouzier
La Grande Course autour du monde (The Great Race) (1965) de Blake Edwards avec Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon, Peter Falk, Keenan Wynn, Arthur O'Connell, Vivian Vance et Dorothy Provine
Séries
Life on Mars Saison 1, 2
Bienvenue en 73 - La Loi selon mon boss - Le Pari - Corruption - Rouge un jour, rouge toujours - Compte à rebours - Cas de conscience - Mon père - Meurtrier en puissance - La Chasse aux ripoux - Peur sur la ville - Pièges pour jeunes femmes - Kidnapping - Héroïne - Recherche du coupable - La Promesse
Doctor Who
La Créature Stellaire - Wild Blue Yonder - Aux confins de l'univers - Le Fabricant de Jouets - The Snowmen - A Christmas Carol - The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe - The Return of Doctor Mysterio - The Church on Ruby Road - Eve of the Daleks
Les Enquêtes de Vera Saison 12
À contre-courant - Un homme d'honneur - Au nom de la loi - Une soirée funeste - Marée montante
Coffre à Catch
#144 : La Draft 2009 : Les bonnes affaires du mercato ! - #145 : La ECW débarque à Londres et l'Undertaker à Strasbourg! (avec Carole) - #146 : Christian enfin champion de la ECW ! - #147 : Un coffret à Noël, ça c'est une idée !
Kaamelott Livre III
Le Jour d’Alexandre - La Cassette II - La Ronde II - Mission - La Baliste - La Baraka - La Veillée - Le Tourment III - La Potion de fécondité II - L’Attaque nocturne - La Restriction II - Les Défis de Merlin II - Saponides et Détergents - Le Justicier - La Crypte maléfique - Arthur in Love II - La Grande Bataille - La Fête de l’hiver II - Sous les verrous II - Le Vulgarisateur - Witness - Le Tribut - Le Culte secret - Le Mangonneau - La Chevalerie - Le Mauvais Augure - Raison d’argent II - Les Auditeurs libres - Le Baiser romain - L’Espion - Alone in the Dark - Le Législateur - L’Insomniaque - L’Étudiant - Le Médiateur - Le Trophée - Hollow Man - La Dispute première partie - La Dispute deuxième partie
Affaires sensibles
Gérald Thomassin : l'étrange disparition d'un coupable idéal
Top Gear
Spécial Nativité
La Voie Jackson
Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3
Meurtres au paradis
L'étrange Noël de Debbie
Spectacles
Le Muguet de Noël (2021) de Sébastien Blanc et Nicolas Poiret avec Lionnel Astier, Frédéric Bouraly, Jean-Luc Porraz et Alexie Ribes
Sinatra (1969) avec Frank Sinatra, Don Costa & son Orchestre
Le Professeur Rollin a encore quelque chose à dire (2003) de François Rollin
Alain Souchon : J'veux du live au Casino de Paris (2002)
La Bonne Planque (1964) de Michel André avec Bourvil, Pierrette Bruno, Robert Rollis, Roland Bailly, Alix Mahieux, Albert Michel et Max Desrau
André Rieu : White Christmas (2023)
Michael Bublé: Home for Christmas (2011) avec Michael Bublé, Gary Barlow, Gino D'Acampo, Dawn French et Kelly Rowland
Michael Buble's Christmas in the City (2021) avec Michael Bublé, Leon Bridges, Camila Cabello, Jimmy Fallon, Kermit the Frog, Hannah Waddingham, Dallas Grant, Jarrett Johnson, Julianna Layne et Loren Smith
Michael Bublé's 3rd Annual Christmas Special (2013) avec Michael Bublé, Mary J. Blige, Mariah Carey, Red Robinson, Jumaane Smith, Patrick Gilmore et Cookie Monster
Un fil à la patte (2005) de Georges Feydeau avec Thierry Beccaro, Marie-Ange Nardi, Valérie Maurice, Églantine Éméyé, Ève Ruggiéri, Tex, David Martin et Patrice Laffont
Vintage Getz (1983) The Stan Getz Quartet live at the Robert Mondavi Winery, Napa Valley, California avec Stan Getz, Victor Lewis, Marc Johnson et Jim McNeely
James Brown : Live at Montreux (1981)
Livres
Le seigneur des anneaux, Tome 3 : Le retour du roi de J.R.R. Tolkien
Détective Conan, Tome 18 de Gôshô Aoyama
Lucky Luke, Tome 27 : L'Alibi de Morris et Claude Guylouïs
Détective Conan, Tome 19 de Gôshô Aoyama
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The Shaman's Apprentice
Episode Recap #50: The Shaman's Apprentice Original Airdate: June 3, 1989
Starring: John D. LeMay as Ryan Dallion Louise Robey as Micki Foster Chris Wiggins as Jack Marshak
Guest cast: Paul Sanchez as John White Cloud (as Paul Miceli-Sanchez) Gordon Tootoosis as Spotted Owl Heather Hess as Sasheena Isabelle Mejias as Blair Gerard Paul Miller as Dr. Eric Jeffries Fiona Reid as Vera Anderson James B. Douglas as Dr. Thomas Lamar Ellen Horst as Nurse Meredith Peter James Haworth as Dr. Ralph Walker Candee Jennings as Night Nurse (as Candace Jennings) Tom Harvey as Harrison Bill Vibert as Anaesthetist
Written by Michael Michaelian Directed by William Fruet
This week, we are at Riverview Hospital, and join a surgery in progress. One doctor is not thrilled by a younger doctor's advice to proceed carefully. The older doc, Dr. Lamar, is also not a fan of both the low-income patient or the Native American nationality of the younger man, John White Cloud. Soon, the surgery goes awry, and John calls Lamar a butcher, causing the older surgeon to revoke all of his privileges at that hospital.
Later, at a small home, a Native American Shaman is chanting and telling an ill man he can rise and walk, but he cannot. Shaman then says his time has come. He doesn't want to hear it and offers money. John shows up, he is the Shaman's grandson. Him and a young woman, Sasheena, leave to talk. Seems his family wanted him to follow in his grandfather's footsteps instead of going to med school. Sasheena is learning, instead.
They go to a ceremonial place and John notices an old Shaman's rattle, a symbol of the power over life and death. It shakes as he holds it and spirits moan. A vision shows him the healing power of the rattle.
Later, at the hospital room of the surgical patient, John arrives to check on him. Another doc says Lamar is going to be pissed he came and picks up the phone. John holds the rattle up, it shakes and flies into the air. The other doc screams in pain and has a gory aneurysm and dies. John grabs the rattle and tells the patient in bed he will be okay.
At Curious Goods, Micki asks Jack to cover as she visits a sick friend, Blair, in Riverview Hospital. Seems her friend has a rare lung cancer. Seems only 1% survive.
John is at the hospital and another doctor, Jeffries, tries to talk with him, telling him to stop upsetting Lamar. John won't listen, saying Lamar isn't really interested in patients, just money.
John comes in to check on Vera, a patient who shares a room with Blair. She says she's in pain, John says he'll talk to Lamar as the man walks in. Lamar says they have done all they can for Vera. John tries to talk to him, but he won't listen, and tells John after today he better not see him in the hospital again. John appeals to the nurse, but she sides with Lamar.
That night, John follows the nurse to a supply room, and she isn't happy to see him. John says she just dopes the patients up and holds up the rattle. It flies about and kills the nurse. He then holds it over Vera and chants, as Blair watches.
Next day, Vera is arguing with Lamar, saying she is well and leaving. She won't listen and packs her bag. She tells Blair to visit with Dr. White Cloud. Blair tells Micki what she saw. Micki tries to calm Blair, who then tells her about the dead nurse. Micki tells her she will look into it.
The old man who the Shaman couldn't cure is seen by John, who asks how much a cure would be worth to him. John says he wants a fully staffed clinic. The man thinks John is just like the rest, but John offers to prove it with another patient.
Micki tells Jack and Ryan about what's going on at Riverview. They all agree it sounds like a cursed item. Jack remembers something in the manifest. He finds an entry for the ceremonial rattle Lewis sold to someone named Spotted Owl. He is the tribal Shaman of the local Iroquois reservation. Jack says he'll go alone.
Jack visits Spotted Owl and says he wants to buy back the rattle to keep it safe in their vault, but Spotted Owl disagrees. He says it belongs to his tribe, but Jack worries in the wrong hands it isn't so benign. Spotted Owl knows Jack means well, but says the rattle is in a safe place. Jack says otherwise, and the old man says he will look into it himself.
Sasheena, Spotted Owl's granddaughter, walks Jack to his car and tells Jack about John, but has faith in her grandfather. Jack isn't so sure, and leaves. Sasheena and Spotted Owl go to where the rattle was kept and find it gone. Sasheena says John was there with her.
Later, at a ceremony, Spotted Owl calls to the sprits to give him a vision of guidance. He sees John at the hospital, with the rattle, following Lamar. He hears Lamar talk about a patient of his that will help change medicine. John slips into this young patient's room and uses the rattle to kill him. Spotted Owl is shocked by this.
At his clinic, John brings in a young boy with the same illness as the old man. John uses the now-powered up rattle on the boy to prove what he can do for the sick man.
Micki is trying to help Blair deal with the treatment she is undergoing, but Blair is desperate and wants to go to John for help.
Later, John walks the young boy, now healed, out of the hospital. The old man says he will be back and his accountants will be in touch. Ryan shows up and asks John about what Blair saw him do. John says he uses herbs and extracts, and was just chanting a mantra to calm his patient. He leaves.
At the store, Ryan tells Jack that the old man's chauffeur told him the boy he was was deathly ill when he entered John's clinic. And that old man Harrison is just as ill. Micki arrives with info from the hospital about the young patient's strange death. Jack connects all the dots, from dead people to cured patients. Jack says he has to go visit Spotted Owl again. Ryan is unsure why John would use a cursed item.
Sasheena is visiting John and asking him to return the rattle. He says he can do more good with it, saying Spotted Owl lied to her. But Sasheena isn't buying it, saying John has changed. She asks him to bring the rattle back and that their grandfather is preparing a ceremony to take the rattle's power away.
Micki is trying to talk with Lamar, but he isn't interested and cuts her off. Dr. Jeffries tells Micki that Lamar was served with a malpractice suit. Micki asks what happened, and Jeffries fills her in on the death and the feud between Lamar and John. He then tells her Blair is leaving for John's clinic. Micki rushes to talk sense into Blair, who won't listen. She tells Micki she's fighting for her life.
Spotted Owl tells Jack he was right about John having the rattle, but he won't risk Jack's life. He says he will work on getting the rattle back himself, and tells Jack to return tomorrow.
Later, John arrives but tells his grandfather he's keeping the rattle. Spotted Owl tells him he saw him kill with it. He tells him to return it or he will call on the spirits. John argues with him, then holds the rattle up to kill the old man, who does battle with the item, but to no avail. The rattle kills Spotted Owl. Sasheena watches and goes to he old man. John grabs the rattle and screams, but blames the old man for not listening.
At the clinic, John has cured the old man, who walks on his own. He asks John if he wants more than just a fully funded clinic. He leaves, and Lamar approaches John. He tells him the medical board is shutting John's clinic down. John almost hits the man, but stops, even though Lamar taunts him.
Micki, Ryan and Jack try to figure out what John will do next. Micki wonders if John will kill Lamar and then heal Blair. Jack tells her this is wrong, no matter how horrible a person Lamar is. But Micki says Blair is young, and should be worth more than an old bigot.
At the clinic, Blair begs John for help. John tells her to come back in a few days, and hints that Lamar may even be of help to her recovery. Later, at the hospital, Lamar is grabbed by John.
Jack, Micki and Ryan go to Spotted Owl's home, but Sasheena tells them her grandfather is dead. She asks Jack to help her awaken the spirits of her ancestors to stop John, who has tied up Lamar and is torturing him first.
Sasheena takes the trio to the burial cave of the Shaman, and they all head inside. They find this is where John has Lamar, and Sasheena says John is trying to purify himself. She tells them they have to proceed the right way and calls to the spirits to stop White Cloud. The spirits appear and tell John he has to return with them. He vanishes, leaving the rattle behind. Which Micki picks up, then goes to comfort Sasheena as Jack and Ryan untie Lamar.
Another day, Micki is wandering in the store. Ryan arrives and tells Jack he watched Sasheena put the rattle back into the burial cave. He thinks it should be in the vault, but Jack says it isn't theirs, and is sure Sasheena and the spirits will guard it. Ryan asks how Lamar is, Jack says fine. Micki thinks it is unfair that Blair is still going to die and Lamar is fine. Jack tries to comfort her. We see Blair arrive at the closed clinic, looking hopeless.
My thoughts:
A good episode, with a different type of antique.
I like how most here all want to do the right thing, but go about it all wrong. Lamar is a good doctor, but mainly for the acclaim and esteem that brings to him. John wants to heal, but then has no problem killing others to kill those he wants to heal. Vera, Blair, the old man, all want to be well without knowing how. And even Micki herself treads a dangerous line when comparing Blair's life to Lamar's. Quite a lot of moral quandaries.
I like how good our trio has gotten about figuring out the curses and how to approach the prospect of getting them back without causing more deaths.
The deaths caused by the rattle are intense. I liked how Micki described the nurse's death as way less gruesome than it actually was.
I also liked how Spotted Owl and the other spirits stopped John, not by going after the rattle a second time, but just removing John from the equation. No John, then the rattle is just lying there.
Also interesting that Jack lets or rather accepts Sasheena keeping the rattle in the cave. I can see Ryan's worry, but Jack is right, I guess. Not their place to just take it.
Very sad end, with Blair just finding her last hope gone. Big downer.
Next week: The Prisoner
#season two#episode recap#the shaman's apprentice#shaman's rattle#rattle#micki foster#ryan dallion#chris wiggins#john d. lemay#louise robey#robey#jack marshak
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The Blackcoat's Daughter (AKA February) | Oz Perkins | 2015
Peter James Haworth, Kiernan Shipka, Lucy Boynton, Elana Krausz, Heather Tod Mitchell
#Peter James Haworth#Kiernan Shipka#Lucy Boynton#Elana Krausz#Heather Tod Mitchell#Oz Perkins#Osgood Perkins#February#The Blackcoat's Daughter#2015
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#The Blackcoat's Daughter#Oz Perkins#Kiernan Shipka#Lucy Boynton#Emma Roberts#James Remar#Lauren Holly#Elana Krausz#Heather Tod Mitchell#Peter James Haworth
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hello, I adore your blog and art! I was wondering whether you had any recs for things to scratch that wuthering heights itch (for those who devoured WH) — retellings, separate standalone fiction, commentary or academia even?
Hello and thank you! Absolutely. I’ll asterisk my faves. Here’s your one-stop shop for all things Wuthering Heights:
Brontë Books: Literature, Graphic Novels, and Poetry
The Lost Child by Caryl Phillps (2015)
*Glass Town: The Imaginary World of the Brontës by Isabel Greenberg (2020)
The Glass Town Game by Catherynne M. Valente (2017)
*“The Glass Essay” by Anne Carson (1995)
Charlotte Brontë Before Jane Eyre by Glynnis Fawkes (2019)
*The Complete Poetry of Emily Jane Brontë (Columbia, 1995)
Film and TV Adaptations: There’s a lot! Here’s a few.
*Wuthering Heights (2011), dir. Andrea Arnold feat. Kaya Scodelario and James Howard
Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1992), dir. Peter Kominsky feat. Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes
Wuthering Heights (1939), dir. William Wyler feat. Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier
Wuthering Heights (1970), dir. Robert Fuest feat. Anna Calder-Marshall and Timothy Dalton
Wuthering Heights BBC series (2009), dir. Coky Giedroyc feat. Charlotte Riley and Tom Hardy
*Not an adaptation but highly recommended: To Walk Invisible two-part film about the Brontë siblings (2016), dir. Sally Wainwright (director of Gentleman Jack!)
Academia You Can Actually Digest: It Exists!
*The Brontë Cabinet: Three Lives in Nine Objects by Deborah Lutz (2015)
“The real Emily Brontë was red in tooth and claw, forget the on-screen romance” by Hila Shachar (2018)
“Was Emily Brontë’s Heathcliff Black?” by Corinne Fowler (2017)
“The Radical Politics of Wuthering Heights” by yours truly (2020)
There is tons of scholarship on WH from Marxist theory to gender studies to postcolonialism so if you want to dive deeper into a topic let me know and I’ll point you in a good direction!
Illustrations of Wuthering Heights: All-Ladies Edition
Clare Leighton (1898–1989)
Edna Clarke Hall (1879–1979)
Some Other Things: Why Not?
Take some time to peruse the Brontë Society website.
Look into some locations around Haworth: Top Withens (sometimes spelled Withins), Brontë Falls, the Brontë Bridge, Haworth Village, the Parsonage Museum which was their home, etc. It’s cool to see the paths they regularly hiked. Top Withens is said to be an inspiration for the eponymous farmhouse in WH (tho more likely the view than anything).
Some very funny Kate Beaton comics about Wuthering Heights
Ofc, the Kate Bush song but also Noel Fielding dressed like her and dancing to the song
Some photos I took of my hike in Brontë Country
If there’s anything else Wuthering Heights you’re interested in, lmk! :)
#rebecca-dewinters#wuthering heights#emily bronte#lit#answered#i have NO idea how or why that read more got in the question lmao???
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Fenghua Liu
Terracotta warrior - Sir Peter Blake, 2012
Acrylic on ceramic
23 3/5 × 8 7/10 × 7 1/10 in
60 × 22 × 18 cm
Derek Boshier
State of Mind, 1976
Mixed media construction in box frame
17 7/10 × 16 1/10 × 2 4/5 in
45 × 41 × 7 cm
Pauline Boty
Untitled, 1960-1961
Mixed media on cardboard (collage, gold gilt paint, sequins)
10 × 13 49/50 in
25.4 × 35.5 cm
Jim Dine
Jim's Head with Branches, 2018
Bronze and acrylic
105 9/10 × 79 9/10 × 94 1/10 in
269 × 203 × 239 cm
Erró
collage Mao - Lénine, 1975
Collage
16 1/2 × 13 in
42 × 33 cm
Marisol Escobar
Picasso, 1981
Bronze
50 × 27 × 30 in
127 × 68.6 × 76.2 cm
James Gill
Marilyn, 2008
Inkjet on Hahnemühle Paper
35 4/5 × 26 4/5 in
91 × 68 cm
Jann Haworth
Crash Test, 2016
60 × 30 × 2 in
152.4 × 76.2 × 5.1 cm
David Hockney
Anne + David, Central Park N. Y. December 1982 # 5, 1982
Chromogenic-print photocollage on cardboard
52 3/10 × 34 in
132.8 × 86.3 cm
Corita Kent
shades of wonder, 1963
Silkscreen on paper
28 × 33 1/10 in
71 × 84 cm
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Graham Stuart Ovenden (born 11 February 1943[2]) is an English painter, fine art photographer and writer.
Graham Ovenden was born in New Alresford, Hampshire, into a Fabian household, attended Itchen Grammar School (1954–59) and was taught music privately by Albert Ketèlbey. He was a student at the Royal College of Music, before taking up painting around 1962.
He was tutored by Lord David Cecil and John Betjeman. He attended the Southampton School of Art, and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1968. One of his most important teachers was James Sellars, an expert on Samuel Palmer.
He moved to Cornwall from Richmond upon Thames in 1973 with painter Annie Ovenden and their family. He bought a cottage on Bodmin Moor with 22 acres of land and began constructing "Barley Splatt", a neo-Gothic building. The style is eclectic and has been influenced by John Betjeman and Frank Lloyd Wright; some features are influenced by World War II aeroplane engines and tin mine chimneys. All the building was done by Ovenden himself and by 1988 the house was about half finished. It was put on the market as an unfinished project in 2008 and sold.
Ovenden was a founder of the Brotherhood of Ruralists in 1975, along with Graham Arnold, Ann Arnold, Sir Peter Blake, David Inshaw, Annie Ovenden and Jann Haworth. The Brotherhood is no longer extant, although in 2005 it had a major London exhibition at the Leicester Galleries. They were given the name "Brotherhood of Ruralists" by the writer Laurie Lee.
His estranged wife is the artist Annie Ovenden. Their daughter, Emily, was a singer with the Mediæval Bæbes and Pythia and author, and is now a publican and Church of England priest.
May Day ~ Graham Ovenden
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Tigers sign Accrington striker
Non-league previews
HYDE UNITED fans who have been clamouring for a new striker since the departure of Liam Hardy may have had their prayers answers.
Manager Jim Gannon has signed Jack Doherty from League One Accrington Stanley and the 6ft 2ins 19-year-old could make his debut at the Project Solar UK Stadium tomorrow (Saturday) against Nantwich Town in the Pitching In NPL premier division.
James Jones returns to the squad after missing the Manchester Premier Cup tie at West Didsbury and Chorlton through illness and Chinedu Uche has recovered from an ankle injury.
Assistant-boss Martin Coyne takes charge of the team as Gannon is unwell. He follows in the footsteps of his father, Ged, who managed and played for the Tigers and his uncle, Peter, who was a star striker in the highly successful Hyde side of the early Eighties.
Mike Clegg will have to mix and match his ASHTON UNITED squad again ahead of their home encounter with title favourites South Shields.
Sam Baird (hamstring) and Tom Bentham (groin) are unlikely to be available until the new year.
Last week's loan signings, defender Scott Holding from Stockport County and midfielder Liam Loughlan from Salford City, should both figure.
Simon Haworth has the benefit of choosing from a fully fit squad for the first time since August as STALYBRIDGE CELTIC prepare to visit Basford United.
Callum Harris returns to the squad after a prolonged period out with a back injury.
He made a cameo appearance as a substitute in the midweek FA Trophy defeat at Farsley but could start tomorrow as Celtic attempt to win for the first time at Greenwich Avenue.
In the first division west, new signing Sidi Sanago will be in the GLOSSOP NORTH END squad for the home clash with midtable Kidsgrove Athletic and skipper Lee Wilshaw is back after being sidelined for the victory at Prescot.
In further good news for the Hillmen, Reuben Dass is once again training with the first team since damaging a knee in pre-season. Khius Metz is back in light training.
In a trio of loan deals, Mitch Glover and Ethan Stanton have gone to Rocester and Alex Maloney has joined Barnoldswick.
At Seel Park, Dave Fish says his MOSSLEY squad is down to the bare bones as he looks to arrest the five-game slide that has seen his team fall from top of the table to seventh — and go out of the FA Trophy and Manchester Premier Cup — with a much-needed win at 1874 Northwich.
Dec Evans is likely to miss out and Antony Brown, Dale Latham, Dave Kuba Kuba and Will Shepherd are all on the long-term injured list.
However, Ben Richardson has been recalled from New Mills. Fish added: "There could possibly be some new faces joining us after the weekend.
In National League North things remain largely the same for CURZON ASHTON who are home to an Alfreton side that has lost its last three league matches. Harry Flowers and Dom Knowles are still injured and Matty Challinor is suspended.
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Teddington Cricket Club, South West London
Teddington Cricket Club, Victoria Spa Interior, St James’ Court Hotel London, Images
Teddington Cricket Club in South West London
1 Dec 2020
Teddington Cricket Club
Design: Reed Watts Architects
Location: St James’ Court Hotel, Victoria, southwest London, UK
Reed Watts Architects have completed a new pavilion in Bushy Park, Richmond Upon Thames for Teddington Cricket Club. The 600 sqm structure was built in just seven months in the Grade 1 listed park and provides a new home for the club as well as sport and leisure facilities for the local community.
A highly successful amateur cricket team, Teddington Cricket Club has been based on the site in Bushy Park since 1863. Their previous clubhouse was formed from two military huts which dated back to the Second World War when Bushy Park was used as a headquarters from which Operation Overlord (D-Day) was planned. The club was in urgent need for new facilities to replace the aging timber structure and poorly organised accommodation of their existing building.
Reed Watts’s designs re-imagine the typical sports pavilion typology with a building that responds positively to the park setting, whilst referencing the form of the previous military huts. The new pavilion includes four new changing rooms, two large social spaces and a roof terrace with the ‘L’ shaped plan providing views over both of the team’s pitches and across the park, whilst shielding the back of house areas and the practise nets from the public.
The landscape of Bushy Park heavily influenced the design with the building’s low form – a discreet presence beneath the mature trees that line the boundary of the park. The calm material palette was similarly chosen to blend into its surroundings. The majority of the cladding in dark stained larch, while the central block has a natural finish which instantly beds into the natural landscape but will further soften with age.
The primary structure is constructed from a SIP’s timber panel system. This lightweight structure was erected quickly and required relatively small foundations, minimising its impact on the ground and disturbance to the deer and visitors to the park as well as wildlife in the adjacent SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest).
At ground level the new space is split into two distinct zones. Four team changing rooms and an official’s changing room, to English Cricket Board (ECB) standards and fully accessible, are located along the northern edge. The main block facing the pitches includes an open plan bar/ clubroom which can be subdivided when required.
Tucked between pitched roofs, a new roof terrace affords panoramic views of the cricket pitches and the landscape beyond, and provides an elevated stage for the club to host outdoor events. Behind the terrace is a generous wildflower green roof that contributes to the site’s biodiversity and attenuates rainwater. The club office and scorer’s box is also located at this raised level.
One of the key strategic ambitions of the project was to reduce the need for visitors to drive through the park to reach the club. To achieve this Reed Watts proposed a new entrance be created into the park, through the listed masonry boundary wall, to give direct access to the site for the first time, making the park and cricket grounds free from traffic and cleaner and greener for all.
Sustainability was integral to all design decisions. The highly energy efficient structure is set to attain BREEAM ‘Excellent’ accreditation, a challenging target for a relatively small community building, significantly distanced from transport and facilities. Environmental features include a ground source heat pump, a 28,000 litre water tank to help irrigate the pitches, and mechanical heat recovery throughout.
The pavilion is an important community resource. As well as TCC, the building is home to Radnor House School sports teams, Teddington Athletic Football Club and a number of other local sports groups meaning it will be used throughout the year, not just the summer cricket season.
Given the sensitive nature of the site, extensive consultation was required by Reed Watts with the Borough of Richmond upon Thames, Royal Parks, Historic and Natural England, and local stakeholders to secure planning permission and conservation area consent.
Matt Rees, Committee Chair, Teddington Cricket Club Reed Watts have been a patient partner throughout the process, helping us from the outset to build our brief and giving us the confidence to challenge our preconceptions of what a clubhouse should be. We are extremely proud of our new home which will be used all year round by our stakeholders for sport and recreation in the local community for generations to come.
Jim Reed, Reed Watts Architects We are incredibly proud to have helped Teddington Cricket Club achieve their ambitious plan to provide a first-class venue in Bushy Park to match the quality of their cricket. While the layout is a focused functional response to the complex brief, the form is inspired by the memory of previous pavilions on the site. As a local resident it is fantastic to contribute as an architect to the community with a building that references the past whilst confidently looking forward to the future.
Reed Watts Architects Reed Watts are a young architectural practice founded by Jim Reed and Matt Watts in 2016, formerly Associate Directors at Haworth Tompkins. Based in Clerkenwell, the practice has a diverse workload across culture and housing sectors. They have recently completed works at the Open Air Theatre in Regents Park and projects at the V&A Museum. They are currently working on projects for the Roundhouse in Camden, Two Community Land Trusts in South-West England and a large housing development for Pocket Living in Barking, which is due to be complied in December. Future projects include a new community pavilion in Ashtead Park, a visitor centre for the National Trust and works to Acland Burghley school in Tufnell Park. reedwatts.com
Teddington Cricket Club Teddington Cricket Club is an amateur cricket club, first established in the early 19th century. After moving permanently to Bushy Park in 1863 the club plays in the Middlesex Premier league, the top level of recreational cricket in the county.
Set in the Grade 1 listed setting of the Royal Park the club runs 5 men’s team, a women’s team and numerous junior teams. Over recent years the club evolved into a highly organised institution whilst retaining the friendliness and informality of a village club.
Teddington Cricket Club is the birth place of modern field hockey.
Bushy Park Originally created for Royal sports, Bushy Park is London’s second largest Royal Park, comprising 445 hectares of parkland in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. The Royal Park is a Conservation Area (1991) and is designated as Metropolitan Open Land. Teddington Cricket Club is located in the north of the park, next to the National Physical Laboratory and adjacent to a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).
Cricket Club in Teddington , South West London – Building Information
Architect: Reed Watts Architects Location: Bushy Park, Teddington Type of project: Cricket Pavilion Client: Teddington Cricket Club Project Manager/ CA Peter Lawrence, Stallworthy Landscape architect: Colvin & Moggeridge Planning advisor: Reed Watts Architects Structural engineer: Evolve M&E consultant: Baystar Quantity surveyor: Peter Lawrence, Stallworthy Principal Designer: Reed Watts Architects BREEAM consultant: JAW Ecology: LUC Arboriculture: Canopy Consultancy Main contractor: GPF Lewis Funding: Private/ Club Start on site date: January 2019 Completion date: September 2019 Contract duration: 8 months Internal floor area: 600 sqm Form of procurement: Design & Build (JCT) Construction cost: £1.7m
Photography © Ben Tynegate
Teddington Cricket Club, South West London information / images received 011220
Location: Teddington, London, England, UK
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CALIFICACIÓN PERSONAL: 6 / 10
Título Original: The Blackcoat's Daughter AKA February
Año: 2015
Duración: 93 min.
País: Estados Unidos
Director: Oz Perkins
Guion: Oz Perkins
Música: Elvis Perkins
Fotografía: Julie Kirkwood
Reparto: Emma Roberts, Kiernan Shipka, Lucy Boynton, Lauren Holly, James Remar,Peter J. Gray, Emma Holzer, Matthew Stefiuk, Greg Ellwand, Elana Krausz,Heather Tod Mitchell, Peter James Haworth, Rose Gagnon, Ronda Louis-Jeune,Cameron Preyde, Myranda Bingham
Productora: Coproducción Estados Unidos-Canadá; Paris Film / Unbroken Pictures / Zed Filmworks / Eggplant Pictures / Traveling Picture Show Company. Distribuida por A24
Género: Horror, Thriller
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3286052/
TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRc_-iK3RVE
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Clark Terry
Clark Virgil Terry Jr. (December 14, 1920 – February 21, 2015) was an American swing and bebop trumpeter, a pioneer of the flugelhorn in jazz, composer, educator, and NEA Jazz Masters inductee.
He played with Charlie Barnet (1947), Count Basie (1948–51), Duke Ellington (1951–59), Quincy Jones (1960), and Oscar Peterson (1964-96). He was also with The Tonight Show Band from 1962 to 1972. Terry's career in jazz spanned more than 70 years, during which he became one of the most recorded jazz musicians ever, appearing on over 900 recordings. Terry also mentored many musicians including Quincy Jones, Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Wynton Marsalis, Pat Metheny, Dianne Reeves, and Terri Lyne Carrington among thousands of others.
Early life
Terry was born to Clark Virgil Terry Sr. and Mary Terry in St. Louis, Missouri, on December 14, 1920. He attended Vashon High School and began his professional career in the early 1940s, playing in local clubs. He served as a bandsman in the United States Navy during World War II. His first instrument was valve trombone.
Big band era
Blending the St. Louis tone with contemporary styles, Terry's years with Basie and Ellington in the late 1940s and 1950s established his prominence. During his period with Ellington, he took part in many of the composer's suites and acquired a reputation for his wide range of styles (from swing to hard bop), technical proficiency, and good humor. Terry influenced musicians including Miles Davis and Quincy Jones, both of whom acknowledged Terry's influence during the early stages of their careers. Terry had informally taught Davis while they were still in St Louis, and Jones during Terry's frequent visits to Seattle with the Count Basie Sextet.
After leaving Ellington in 1959, Clark's international recognition soared when he accepted an offer from the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) to become a staff musician. He appeared for ten years on The Tonight Show as a member of the Tonight Show Band until 1972, first led by Skitch Henderson and later by Doc Severinsen, where his unique "mumbling" scat singing led to a hit with "Mumbles". Terry was the first African American to become a regular in a band on a major US television network. He said later: "We had to be models, because I knew we were in a test.... We couldn't have a speck on our trousers. We couldn't have a wrinkle in the clothes. We couldn't have a dirty shirt."
Terry continued to play with musicians such as trombonist J. J. Johnson and pianist Oscar Peterson, and led a group with valve-trombonist Bob Brookmeyer that achieved some success in the early 1960s. In February 1965, Brookmeyer and Terry appeared on BBC2's Jazz 625. and in 1967, presented by Norman Granz, he was recorded at Poplar Town Hall, in the BBC series Jazz at the Philharmonic, along side James Moody, Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, Benny Carter, Teddy Wilson, Bob Cranshaw, Louie Bellson and T-Bone Walker.
In the 1970s, Terry concentrated increasingly on the flugelhorn, which he played with a full, ringing tone. In addition to his studio work and teaching at jazz workshops, Terry toured regularly in the 1980s with small groups (including Peterson's) and performed as the leader of his Big B-A-D Band (formed about 1970). After financial difficulties forced him to break up the Big B-A-D Band, he performed with bands such as the Unifour Jazz Ensemble. His humor and command of jazz trumpet styles are apparent in his "dialogues" with himself, on different instruments or on the same instrument, muted and unmuted. He occasionally performed solos on a trumpet or flugelhorn mouthpiece.
Later career
From the 1970s through the 1990s, Terry performed at Carnegie Hall, Town Hall, and Lincoln Center, toured with the Newport Jazz All Stars and Jazz at the Philharmonic, and was featured with Skitch Henderson's New York Pops Orchestra. In 1998, Terry recorded George Gershwin's "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" for the Red Hot Organization's compilation album Red Hot + Rhapsody, a tribute to George Gershwin, which raised money for various charities devoted to increasing AIDS awareness and fighting the disease. In 2001, he again recorded for the Red Hot Organization with artist Amel Larrieux for the compilation album Red Hot + Indigo, a tribute to Ellington.
In the 1980s he was a featured soloist performing in front of the band. In November 1980, he was a headliner along with Anita O'Day, Lionel Hampton and Ramsey Lewis during the opening two-week ceremony performances celebrating the short-lived resurgence of the Blue Note Lounge at the Marriott O'Hare Hotel near Chicago. He was introduced to great acclaim by Chicago jazz disc-jockey Dick Buckley.
Prompted early in his career by Billy Taylor, Clark and Milt Hinton bought instruments for and gave instruction to young hopefuls, which planted the seed that became Jazz Mobile in Harlem. This venture tugged at Terry's greatest love: involving youth in the perpetuation of jazz. From 2000 onwards, he hosted Clark Terry Jazz Festivals on land and sea, held his own jazz camps, and appeared in more than fifty jazz festivals on six continents. Terry composed more than two hundred jazz songs and performed for seven U.S. Presidents.
He also had several recordings with major groups including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Dutch Metropole Orchestra, and the Chicago Jazz Orchestra, hundreds of high school and college ensembles, his own duos, trios, quartets, quintets, sextets, octets, and two big bands: Clark Terry's Big Bad Band and Clark Terry's Young Titans of Jazz. The Clark Terry Archive at William Paterson University in Wayne, New Jersey, contains instruments, tour posters, awards, original copies of over 70 big band arrangements, recordings and other memorabilia.
In February 2004, Terry guest starred as himself, on Little Bill, a children's television series. Terry was a resident of Bayside, Queens, and Corona, Queens, New York, later moving to Haworth, New Jersey, and then Pine Bluff, Arkansas.
His autobiography was published in 2011 and, as Taylor Ho Bynum writes in The New Yorker, "captures his gift for storytelling and his wry humor, especially in chronicling his early years on the road, with struggles through segregation and gigs in juke joints and carnivals, all while developing one of most distinctive improvisational voices in music history."
In April 2014, a documentary Keep on Keepin' On, follows Clark Terry over four years to document the mentorship between Terry, and 23-year-old blind piano prodigy Justin Kauflin, as the young man prepares to compete in an elite, international competition.
According to his own website Terry was "one of the most recorded jazz artists in history and had performed for eight American Presidents."
In December 2014 the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and Cécile McLorin Salvant visited Terry, who had celebrated his 94th birthday on December 14, at the Jefferson Regional Medical Center. A lively rendition of "Happy Birthday" was played.
Death and tributes
On February 13, 2015, it was announced that Terry had entered hospice care to manage his advanced diabetes. He died on February 21, 2015.
Writing in The New York Times, Peter Keepnews said Terry "was acclaimed for his impeccable musicianship, loved for his playful spirit and respected for his adaptability. Although his sound on both trumpet and the rounder-toned flugelhorn (which he helped popularize as a jazz instrument) was highly personal and easily identifiable, he managed to fit it snugly into a wide range of musical contexts."
Writing in UK's The Daily Telegraph, Martin Chilton said: "Terry was a music educator and had a deep and lasting influence on the course of jazz. Terry became a mentor to generations of jazz players, including Miles Davis, Wynton Marsalis and composer-arranger Quincy Jones."
Interviewing Terry in 2005, fellow jazz trumpeter Scotty Barnhart said he was "... one of the most incredibly versatile musicians to ever live ... a jazz trumpet master that played with the greatest names in the history of the music ..."
Awards and honors
Over 250 awards, medals and honors, including:
Inducted into the Jazz at Lincoln Center Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame (2013)
The 2010 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, two Grammy certificates, three Grammy nominations
Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame
The National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Award (1991)
Sixteen honorary doctorates
Keys to several cities
Jazz Ambassador for U.S. State Department tours in the Middle East and Africa
A knighthood in Germany
Charles E. Lutton Man of Music Award, presented by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity in (1985). Terry was awarded honorary membership in the Fraternity by the Beta Zeta Chapter at the College of Emporia (1968). He was also made an honorary member of the Iota Phi chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi, National Honorary Band Fraternity (2011).
The French Order of Arts and Letters (2000)
A life-sized wax figure for the Black World History Museum in St. Louis
Inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame (1996)
NARAS Present's Merit Award (2005)
Trumpeter of the Year by the Jazz Journalists Association (2005)
Wikipedia
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VIDEO LECTURES
MA Visiting Lecturers 1996 - 2009 De Montfort University, Leicester (In No Particular Order)
John Darwell Mark Durden David Moore Brett Rogers Martin Harrison Dave Lee Jenny Matthews Jane Fletcher Peter Cattrell Gerry Badger Martin Parr David Brittain Martin Barnes Daniel Meadows Paul Reas John Davies Chris Steele-Perkins Hannah Starkey Susan Bright Mark Sealy Kate Mellor David Campany Emma Dexter David Hurn Elizabeth Edwards Liz Rideal Clive Landen Paul Wombell Olivier Richon Charlotte Cotton Roger Taylor Roger Bradley Steve Mayes Victor Burgin Keith Arnatt John Kippin Dave Chandler Joy Gregory Pavel Buchler Melanie Manchot Hamish Fulton
Jem Southam Mark Power John Goto Rosy Martin Anna Fox Deborah Baker John Hilliard Ian Walker Sharon Kivland Mari Mahr Stephen Bull Peter Finnemore Anne McNeill Simon Norfolk Michael Hiley Robert Clark Jane Prophet Patrick Sutherland Helen Sears Brian Griffin Dewi Lewis Mark Haworth Booth Pete James Andy Earl Tom Hunter Thomas Joshua Cooper John Blakemore Terry Dennett Evergon Julian Germaine Dave Chandler Joy Gregory Pavel Buchler Melanie Manchot Hamish Fulton Gina Glover Val Williams Gina Glover Val Williams
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