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Search resuls for: "Domingo’s"


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Colman Domingo's Time Is Now
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | by ( Associated Press | Nov. | At P.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +8 min
NEW YORK (AP) — Colman Domingo has a commanding physical presence, an expressive face and soulful eyes. His performance in George C. Wolfe's “Rustin" — Domingo's first time atop the call sheet — has made the 53-year-old journeyman actor a favorite for a best actor Oscar nomination. Though celebrated — Colman shared in an Obie award for ensemble — once the play closed, Domingo found himself bartending again. “I would be talking with Mark Rickler the production designer, ‘Oh, Colman could do that.’ Part of my brain would go, ‘Oh, Colman could do that,’' recalls Wolfe. “And she clutches her heart and says, ‘Oh, Colman.’ And then we started hiking again.”___Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP
Persons: — Colman Domingo, Bravo’s “ Zola, Bayard Rustin, “ Rustin, , Steven Spielberg’s “, Domingo, isn’t, ” Domingo, , There’s, George C, Wolfe's “ Rustin, , Oscar, It’s, I’ve, “ Rustin ”, Michelle Obama, Domingo’s, he’s, wasn’t, I’m, Blitz Bazawule, “ Colman, Bogart, Daniel, Colman, Rustin, Martin Luther King Jr, Rachelle Horowitz, , ’ ” Domingo, — Colman, bartending, Donna Summer, Oprah Winfrey, Oprah, Tony, Victor Strand, Barry Jenkins, Beale, “ Zola ”, ‘ Zola, , Janicza Bravo, ’ Wolfe, “ Ma, Viola Davis, Chadwick Boseman, Cutler, Mark Rickler, ‘ Oh, Oh, Wolfe, Winfrey, Ava DuVernay’s, “ Selma ”, Jake Coyle Organizations: Productions, Temple University, Netflix, Public Theater, Broadway, Scottsboro Boys, Bravo, Hollywood Locations: , Steven Spielberg’s “ Lincoln, Philadelphia, wasn’t, Washington, Manhattan, Central, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Domingo, Hawaii
Every so often an actor so dominates a movie that its success largely hinges on his every word and gesture. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Pacifist, ex-con, singer, lutist, socialist — Bayard Rustin had many lives, but he remains best known as the main organizer of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. It was Rustin who read the march’s demands from the podium, remaining near King’s side as he delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. Several activists have asked King to lead a mass protest against the forthcoming Democratic National Convention. The protest, Rustin explains, will send a message to the party and its nominee, the front-runner John F. Kennedy.
Persons: Colman, “ Rustin, Martin Luther King Jr, lutist, Bayard Rustin, Rustin, “ Rustin ”, George C, Wolfe, Julian Breece, Dustin Lance Black, King, John F, Kennedy, Roy Wilkins, Chris Rock, Adam Clayton Powell Jr, Jeffrey Wright Organizations: Jobs, Lincoln, Democratic, Convention, U.S, Representative, Harlem Locations: , Washington, Rustin
Over a holiday weekend dedicated to labor, this year’s Telluride Film Festival attendees couldn’t help being reminded of striking workers: the members of SAG-AFTRA, the television and film actors’ union currently in a standoff with the Hollywood studios. Vivid, intimate or both, the variety and quality of these performances made awards talk unavoidable. (Bill Pence and Luddy died after long illnesses in the last year.) Witness Netflix’s push on behalf of “Nyad” and “Rustin.” Together with the overlapping Venice Film Festival, it remains the gateway into awards season. In a long-ago interview, the director Mike Nichols cautioned a nascent film reviewer to not mistake the dancer for the dance.
Persons: Andrew Scott’s, Emma Stone’s, Paul Giamatti’s, ” Colman, Bayard Rustin, “ Rustin ”, García, , Annette Bening, Jodie Foster’s, Leonie Benesch’s, Tom Luddy, James Card, Bill, Stella Pence, Bill Pence, Luddy, , “ Rustin, Mike Nichols Organizations: Telluride Film, SAG, Hollywood, Lucha Libre, Academy Locations: Telluride, , Venice
The Los Angeles Opera, Post-Plácido Domingo
  + stars: | 2023-05-12 | by ( Adam Nagourney | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
It survived the downturn without running a deficit, relying on salary reductions, a handful of layoffs, a $5 million five-year loan against the endowment, and federal aid. Domingo’s downfall stunned Los Angeles and its opera company, which had been so closely identified with the star tenor, who had been singing there since the 1960s and was instrumental in the creation of the company. It is difficult to say precisely whether attendance was affected by the departure of Domingo, given that the coronavirus shutdown followed so soon afterward. For many years his performances had drawn the biggest crowds, and his image was as integral to the company’s marketing as Gustavo Dudamel’s is for its neighbor, the Los Angeles Philharmonic. “It is unmistakably a loss because he’s such a titanic figure in the world,” Koelsch said.
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