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1 / 4 Romeo + Juliet: Best Art Direction. Losers: 0 / 5 Hamlet 0 / 4 Mars Attacks!, Moll Flanders 0 / 3 The Crucible, Everyone Says I Love You, The Portrait of a Lady, Sling Blade, Secrets & Lies, Trainspotting 0 / 2 The Birdcage, Cold Comfort Farm, The First Wives Club, Jude, Ridicule
Taylor and his team constructed more than 70 full-sized latex costumes to represent the Borovnian crowds—plasticine figures that inhabit Pauline and Juliet's magical fantasy world. Heavenly Creatures contains more than thirty shots that were digitally manipulated, ranging from the morphing garden of the ‘Fourth World’ to castles in fields ...
In 2011, the Matilda Awards created a Hall of Fame which recognises performers/craftsmen for a body of work. [8] As of June 2017, the inductees were Sven Swenson, Sue Rider, Eugene Gilfedder, David Walters, Bill Haycock, Dale Ferguson, Andrew Buchanan, Caroline Kennison, Michael Futcher, Helen Howard, Greg Clarke, Hayden Spencer, Helen Cassidy, and Jennifer Flowers.
Best Costume Design Sarah Bacon the Abbey Theatre production of The Shadow of a Gunman; Catherine Fay for the Gate Theatre production of Romeo and Juliet; Monica Frawley for the Abbey Theatre production of By the Bog of Cats; Doreen McKenna and Francis O'Connor for DruidShakespeare; Best Lighting Design
Four cities per season. Hundreds of shows per city. Double-digit looks per show. It all amounts to thousands of new runway looks every year. And hundreds more appear on the red carpet and in the ...
The Crucible is a 1961 English language opera written by Robert Ward based on the 1953 play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. It won both the 1962 Pulitzer Prize for Music and the New York Music Critics Circle Citation. The libretto was lightly adapted from Miller's text by Bernard Stambler.
Sarah Hyland, Wells Adams, Taylor Swift. Getty Images (2) Sarah Hyland and Wells Adams kicked off Halloween early with a costume inspired by Taylor Swift. Hyland, 32, and Adams, 39, hilariously ...
The Academy Award for Best Costume Design is one of the Academy Awards presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) for achievement in film costume design. [1] The award was first given in 1949, for films made in 1948. Initially, separate award categories were established for black-and-white films and color films.