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2014. október 12., vasárnap

Robert Redford to receive New York career honour

Robert Redford  
Robert Redford is being recognised for his screen roles and work for the film industry
Hollywood actor and director Robert Redford is to receive a lifetime achievement award from New York's Film Society of Lincoln Centre.
The 77-year-old's career highlights will be celebrated at a gala in the city next April.
The society, which organises the annual New York Film Festival, said that Redford's "impact is hard to measure in many ways".
Recent Chaplin Award recipients include Barbra Streisand and Nicole Kidman.
The honour is given to the movie industry's most notable talents, and has also lauded Martin Scorsese, Alfred Hitchcock and Charlie Chaplin, after whom the award is named.
He was the first recipient in 1972, while last year's winner was director Rob Reiner.
Lesli Klainberg, the film society's executive director, said that Redford's contribution as an actor has been significant, but also pinpointed his work as founder of the Sundance Film Festival.
"Without the Sundance Institute and Sundance Film Festival, we'd likely have a different industry. And they continue to have a huge impact," she said.
"Obviously he's a star that many of us have grown up watching from his films in the early '60s to his current work.
"I happen to think he's also had some of the greatest co-stars ever, from Natalie Wood to Faye Dunaway, Barbra Streisand, and, of course, his great bromance with Paul Newman," added Ms Klainberg.
Redford starred in All is Lost in 2013, which was shown at the New York Film Festival. His performance was greeted with a standing ovation at its Cannes Film Festival premiere last year.

2014. október 4., szombat

Singer Lynsey de Paul dies aged 64

Lynsey De Paul  
Lynsey de Paul - along with Mike Moran - came second in the 1977 Eurovision Song Contest
Singer and songwriter Lynsey de Paul has died at the age of 64, following a suspected brain haemorrhage.
De Paul, who represented the UK in the 1977 Eurovision Song Contest with the song Rock Bottom, had five top 20 UK chart hits, including 1972's Sugar Me.
She became the first woman to win an Ivor Novello award for songwriting.
"Although she was small in stature, she was very big in positive personality," said her agent Michael Joyce. "She was always so positive about everything."
"Sad news of Lynsey De Paul, beautiful and talented singer/songwriter," tweeted actor John Challis, best known as Boycie in Only Fools and Horses. "Storm in a Teacup, one of my favourite songs."
Broadcaster and writer Gyles Brandeth called de Paul "gifted, funny, sparky, charming". "A lovely talent & person," he wrote on Twitter.
Her sense of humour informed her close friendship with Spike Milligan, who reportedly nicknamed the diminutive star 'Looney De Small'.
Lynsey De Paul  
De Paul had a long relationship with actor James Coburn
 
De Paul, who broke into the music scene in 1971, followed up her Sugar Me hit with Getting a Drag, reaching number 18 in the charts.
Her 1973 hit Won't Somebody Dance With Me won her her first Ivor Novello award.
A second Ivor Novello Award followed a year later for No Honestly, which was also the theme tune to the ITV comedy of the same name, starring Pauline Collins and John Alderton.
She also wrote the theme to Esther Rantzen's BBC One series Hearts Of Gold.
Paying tribute, Rantzen, who fronted the show, called her "a renaissance woman".
"She could do everything - she could sing, she could compose, she was an immensely talented artist," she said.
"She became a huge star but she was also a loyal and generous friend. It's an absolutely tragic loss."
De Paul never married but was romantically linked to a string of well-known men including Sean Connery, Dudley Moore and Ringo Starr.
An interview with the Mail in 2007 revealed she had five offers of marriage, including one from James Coburn and another from Chas Chandler, bassist with The Animals.

De Paul became a popular star across Europe in the 1970s as David Sillito reports.
She reached the height of her popularity in the mid-1970s, with number one hits in Switzerland, Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands - although never the UK.
However, her popularity waned in the late 1970s although she continued to compose and perform, famously singing her own song at the Conservative Party conference in 1983.
She also starred in celebrity quiz shows such as Blankety Blank and more recently, reality shows including Cash in the Attic and Come Dine With Me.
In 1992, De Paul presented a documentary about women's self-defence, called Eve Fights Back, which won a Royal Television Society award.
The singer had spoken previously of her abusive childhood, and her history of violent relationships.
Her niece, Olivia Rubin, told the Times her death was "completely unexpected".
"She was a vegetarian, she didn't smoke, she didn't drink - she was amazing, in fact."
"Am in utter shock at sudden death of my friend Lynsey de Paul," echoed broadcaster Russell Kane, on Twitter. "We were chatting in the post office just two weeks ago. Can't believe it."

Sherlock Holmes silent classic uncovered in Paris vault

William Gillette as Sherlock Holmes in 1905  
Actor William Gillette is credited with coining the catchphrase 'elementary' to sidekick Watson
A silent Sherlock Holmes film made in 1916 and featuring the only screen performance by William Gillette has been found in the French film archive.
The film, thought lost forever, had been wrongly catalogued decades ago by staff at the Cinematique Francaise.
US actor Gillette made his name as Holmes mainly on stage, bringing his trademark deerstalker and pipe to life for the first time.
The movie is being restored and will be shown at a French festival next year.
It is due to be premiered in the US at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival in May 2015.
Gillette, who died in 1937, gave the definitive portrayal of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's legendary sleuth during his lifetime, adopting many of the traits that have been seen since and survive to this day.
He was also a playwright, and wrote the story for the 1916 film which was simply entitled Sherlock Holmes.
William Gillette as Sherlock Holmes in 1916 film  
William Gillette as Sherlock Holmes in a still from the 1916 film
 
William Gillette as Sherlock Holmes in 1916 film 
 Holmes was depicted as a scientific genius back in 1916
 
It was made in Chicago in 1915 at the Essanay Studios, which is best known for a series of short Charlie Chaplin films made around the same time.
The feature-length film contained elements from various Conan Doyle mysteries featuring the famous detective, and was presented in promotional material as being in seven acts.
The version uncovered in Paris had captions in French and was ready to be colour-tinted specifically for the French market at the time.
It had been mixed up with some other unrelated Sherlock material and not been labelled properly.
Staff at the archive came across it while working on an extensive project to catalogue the thousands of nitrate film reels in its collection.
Tom Baker as Sherlock Holmes 
 The pipe and deerstalker image of Holmes survived for decades, played here by Tom Baker in 1982
 
Bryony Dixon, curator of silent film at the British Film Institute, said it was "top of the list" in the canon of missing Sherlock Holmes films, so is a "pretty exciting" find.
"This also connects with Victorian theatre which is more obscure than early film. It's exciting to get Gillette in particular.
"He made Sherlock Holmes a character for the first time rather than a caricature, and it's amazing how much we think of him was based on Gillette's image.
"Quite often discoveries are made in plain sight like this. Collections have cans that just say 'film' on them and you don't know what's in them until you get them out, which can be very time consuming."
The restoration, which is being carried out in Bologna in Italy, will strive to show the film as it was originally intended, added Ms Dixon.
Ms Dixon added that the BFI is hunting for a 1914 Sherlock film called A Study in Scarlet - the first British film portrayal of the character - and said the latest discovery could help its ongoing search.


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