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Filming Othello is a 1978 English-language West German documentary film directed by and starring Orson Welles about the making of his award-winning 1951 production Othello. The film, which was produced for West German television, was the last completed feature film directed by Welles, as well as the last one to be made during his lifetime.
Orson Welles and Suzanne Cloutier in Othello. One of Welles's more complicated shoots, Othello was filmed erratically over three years. Shooting began in 1949, but was forced to shut down when the film's original Italian producer announced on one of the first days of shooting that he was bankrupt.
And this 2009 teen musical, featuring the then-16-year-old Cyrus as the titular character returning to her Tennessee roots, filmed many scenes in the Nashville area and Franklin.
Most reviews were positive. John Griffin, London correspondent of the Herald Tribune, wrote that it was a "star vehicle for a star actor."Cecil Wilson praised the performances of Peter Finch and Gudrun Ure. T.C. Worsley of the New Statesman praised the play's tension, although was more ambiguous about Welles's performance. [9]
Hallelujah (film) Hannah Montana: The Movie; The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things; Holland, Michigan (film) Hollywood to Dollywood; Holy Ghost People (2013 film) The Hospital (2013 film) Hustle & Flow
O (2001 film) Omkara (2006 film) Otello (1906 film) Otello (1986 film) Othello (1922 film) Othello (1951 film) Othello (1955 film) Othello (1965 British film) Othello (1980 film) Othello (1995 film) Othello (2001 film) Othello (Theatre Night)
The Bradleys produced several Country Style, USA film programs in the Quonset hut, but the demand for recording music in the Quonset hut (which was much larger than the house's basement Studio A) eventually overtook the Bradley's film production business, and the Bradleys purchased a 3-track mixing console from Decca and built a control room in ...
The first page of Othello from the First Folio, printed in 1623. The terminus ad quem for Othello (that is, the latest year in which the play could have been written) is 1604, since a performance of the play in that year is mentioned in the accounts book of Sir Edmund Tilney, then Master of the Revels. [36] [37]