Whale music play anthony minghella biography
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Anthony Minghella
British film director and writer (1954–2008)
Anthony Minghella CBE | |
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Minghella in 2004 | |
Born | (1954-01-06)6 January 1954 Ryde, Isle of Wight, England |
Died | 18 March 2008(2008-03-18) (aged 54) London, England |
Alma mater | University of Hull |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1975–2008 |
Spouses | Yvonne Millar (divorced)Carolyn Choa (m. 1985) |
Children | 2, including Max |
Relatives | Dominic Minghella (brother) |
Anthony MinghellaCBE (6 January 1954 – 18 March 2008) was a British film director, playwright, and screenwriter. He was chairman of the board of Governors at the British Film Institute between 2003 and 2007. He directed Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990), The English Patient (1996), The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), and Cold Mountain (2003), and produced Iris (2001).
He received the Academy Award for Best Director for The English Patient. In addition, he received three more Academy Award nominations; he was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay for both The English Patient and The Talented Mr. Ripley, and was posthumously nominated for Best Picture for The Reader (2008), as
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Whale Music (1992)
by Anthony Minghella
Directed by Keefe Browning & Peter Barker
Performances: Thurs Fourteenth - Sat 16th Could 1992, Immediate Corner
Introduction
Text examine the take place
Cast
Crew
With escalation to: Vicky Kalnins, Alan Buckman, Marker Piacentino, Colin Starkey, Tricia Court, Bernie Bullbrook, Jackie Oliver, Astronomer Bartlett instruct Kevin Richardson
Reviews
Some review quotes go territory
Gallery
- Photos coarse Brian Fretwell
Reminiscences and Anecdotes
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See Also
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References
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External Links
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Whale Music by Anthony Minghella
SMBMay 15, 2007
Written, and presumably set, in 1981, Whale Music was Minghella’s first real theatrical success. Telling the story of a somewhat naïve pregnant student and her winter retreat to the coastal town of her birth, it examines the female relationships formed amongst a variety of characters.
False Teeth present an honest and well thought-out production of this slightly dated piece, the actors bringing genuine emotion to somewhat stereotypically written female ‘types’. Caroline (Lauren Dingsdale), pregnant by one of two men, struggles to keep her emotions in check and has fled to a room in the house of the bitter, bohemian Stella (Bella Heard – hope the foot gets better soon!). Their relationship develops strongly, as does that of Caroline with her former schoolmate Fran (Avigail Agam) – the devoted mother struggling to ignore a less than perfect marriage. The three performers played this ‘three ages of women’ sensitively, as Fran and Stella struggle to exert their influence over the malleable Caroline.
On the eve of Caroline’s 21st birthday they are joined by Kate (Sophie Duncan) – Fran and Caroline’s lesbian former English teacher and also landlady to Caroline at university in Leeds – and her energetic, would-be activist,