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Robert Lepage CC OQ (born December 12, 1957) is a Canadian playwright, actor, film director, and stage director. Early life. Lepage was raised in Quebec City. [1]
Far Side of the Moon (French: La Face cachée de la lune) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Robert Lepage and released in 2003. [2] The film is based on Lepage's eponymous play, which premiered in 2000.
The Far Side of the Moon (French: La Face cachée de la Lune) is a 2000 play by Quebec playwright Robert Lepage.Written in collaboration with Adam Nashman and Peder Bjurman, it features an original score by Laurie Anderson and marionettes by Pierre Robitaille and Sylvie Courbron.
Robert Marcel Lepage (born 5 July 1951) is a Canadian musician and film score composer. Born in Montreal, Lepage trained in music at the age of 20, and learned to play the clarinet and saxophone. [2] He performed with René Lussier and Pierre Hébert during the 1980s and 1990s. [2] He went on to write the scores for 150 films. [2]
An examination of the creative process, the film follows theatre director Robert Lepage as he works on Echo, the 1989 theatre production which would become Lepage's first significant popular and critical failure as a theatre director. [2] The film was a Genie Award nominee for Best Short Documentary at the 14th Genie Awards in 1993. [3]
Polygraph (French: Le Polygraphe) is a film by Canadian director Robert Lepage, released in 1996. [1]The film stars Marie Brassard as Lucie Champagne, an actress who is given the role of Marie-Claire in a film dramatizing a real-life murder, and Patrick Goyette as François, Lucie's former boyfriend who was Marie-Claire's neighbour, remains a suspect in the real crime to the point that even he ...
The Confessional (French: Le Confessionnal) is a 1995 mystery-drama film directed by Robert Lepage. [2]The film is set in Quebec City, in two distinct time periods.In the present day, Pierre Lamontagne (Lothaire Bluteau) searches for his estranged brother Marc (Patrick Goyette) to help unravel a family mystery.
Nô is a 1998 Canadian film by director Robert Lepage.It was based on one segment in Lepage's play Seven Streams of the River Ota. [1] [2]The title is a pun which reflects the film's dramatic structure, linking the 1980 Quebec referendum (in which the "no" won) to Japanese Nō theatre.