یکشنبه ۰۹ اردیبهشت ۰۳

30Nama

film cinema

Caroline Aaron

۲۳ بازديد

Born Caroline Sidney Abady

August 7, 1952 (1952-08-07)

Richmond, Virginia, U.S.

Occupation Actress/Producer

Years active 1982–present

Spouse(s) James Foreman (1981–present; 2 children)

 

Caroline Aaron (born August 7, 1952) is an American actress and producer.

 

 

Personal life

Aaron was born as Caroline Sidney Abady in Richmond, Virginia of Jewish heritage.

Her mother, Nina Friedman Abady, was a civil rights activist in the American South.

She attended American University in Washington, D.C., studying performing arts.

Her elder sister, Josephine Abady, a theatre director and producer, died from breast cancer on May 25, 2002, aged 52.

 

Filmography

As actress

1982: Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean: Martha

1983: Without a Trace: Makeup woman

1983: Baby It's You: Waitress

1984: The Brother from Another Planet: Randy Sue Carter

1986: Heartburn: Judith

1987: O.C. and Stiggs: Janine

1987: Anna: Interviewer

1988: Working Girl: Petty Marsh Secretary

1989: Crimes and Misdemeanors: Barbara

1990: Edward Scissorhands: Marge

1990: Alice: Sue

1991: Dead and Alive: The Race for Gus Farace: Dolly

1992: This Is My Life: Martha Ingels

1992: Husbands and Wives: Dinner party guest

1993: The Pickle: Nancy Osborne

1993: Sleepless in Seattle: Dr. Marcia Fieldstone

1994: Mixed Nuts: Hotline Caller (voice)

1995: Dad, the Angel & Me: Abby

1995: A Modern Affair: Elaine

1996: White Lies: Gallerist

1996: Big Night: Woman in Restaurant

1996: The Boys Next Door: Mrs. Warren

1996: House Arrest: Louise Finley

1997: White Lies: Virginia Past

1997: Dinner and Driving: Roz

1997: Weapons of Mass Distraction: Robin Zimmer

1997: Deconstructing Harry: Doris

1998 Life in the Fast Lane Venessa

1998: Primary Colors: Lucille Kaufman

1998: There's No Fish Food in Heaven: Vanessa

1998: Sex and the City: Pamela Glock

1999: A Fine Day for Flying: Madelyn

1999: Dying to Live: Detective

1999: Anywhere but Here: Gail Letterfine

1999: Tuesdays with Morrie: Connie

2000: What Planet Are You From?: Nadine Jones

2000: An American Daughter: Veronica

2000: Running Mates: Jody Daniels

2000: Lucky Numbers: Nurse Sharpling

2000: Bounce: Donna

2001: Nobody's Baby: Doctor

2001: Amy's Orgasm: Janet Gaines

2001: Never Again: Elaine

2001: Joe Dirt: Joe's Mom

2001: When Billie Beat Bobby

2002: Pumpkin: Claudia Prinsinger

2002: The Secret Life of Zoey: Mimi

2003: Two Days: Mrs. Miller

2004: Along Came Polly: Wedding Coordinator

2004: Call Waiting: Judy Baxter/Carol Lane

2004: A Day Without a Mexican: Aunt Gigi

2004: Cellular: Marilyn Mooney

2004: Beyond the Sea: Nina Cassotto Maffia

2004: Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman: Madeleine

2005: Just Like Heaven: Grace

2006: Grilled: Faye Goldbluth

2007: Nancy Drew: Barbara Barbara

2007 My First Time Driving Helen Short film

2007 Love Comes Lately Rachel Meyerowitz

2008 Surveillance Janet

2008: Ugly Betty: Judge

2009: Desperate Housewives: Daphne Bicks

2009: The Young and the Restless: Joanne "JoJo" Glover (Dec 28, 2009-present)

2009 Finding Bliss Debra Balaban

2009 Love Hurts Wanda

2010 Our Family Wedding Elaine

2010 Meeting Spencer Nancy Diamond

2012 21 Jump Street Annie Schmidt

2013 Sex & Marriage Beatrice Video

2013 Tuna Virginia 

2014 22 Jump Street Annie Schmidt 

2014 The Rewrite Ellen 

2016 Hello, My Name Is Doris Val

 

Television

Year Title Role Notes

      1991 Dead and Alive: The Race for Gus Farace Dolly TV film

      1991 Law & Orde rSusan Episode: "God Bless the Child"

      1992 Law & Order Valerie Walker Episode: "Point of View"

      1995 Empty Nest Shannon Episode: "Feelings, Whoa Whoa Whoa, Feelings"

      1995 Mad About You Trish Dawson Episode: "Two Tickets to Paradise"

      1995 If Not For You Nina Episodes: "Taking a Shower with My Two True Loves", "The Kiss"

      1995 Dad, the Angel & Me AbbyTV film

      1995 Wings Mary Pat Lee Episode: "Ex, Lies and Videotape"

      1996 Dave's World Judy Episode: "Stress"

      1997 Wings Mary Pat Lee Episode: "Let's Talk About Sex"

      1997 Early Edition Dr. Susan Leonard Episode: "Frostbite"

      1997 Weapons of Mass Distraction Robin Zimmer TV film

      1998 Late Line Amy Freundlich / Rhonda Laskey (voice) Recurring role (4 episodes)

      1998 Frasier Phyllis Conrad Episode: "First Date"

      1998 Sex and the City Pamela Glock Episode: "The Monogamists"

      1999 Ally McBeal Laura Dipson Episode: "Love Unlimited"

      1999 NYPD Blue Doris Steinman Episode: "Big Bang Theory"

      1999 Practice, The The Practice Delores Keplar Episode: "Of Human Bondage"

      1999 Payne Diane Taggert Episode: "I Never Forget a Face-Lift"

      1999 Tuesdays with Morrie Connie TV film

      2000 Judging Amy Eloise Darline Episodes: "Zero to Sixty", "The Wee Hours"

      2000 American Daughter, An An American Daughter Veronica TV film

      2000 Gideon's Crossing Nancy Bales Episode: "The Gift"

      2000 Running Mates Jody Daniels TV film

      2000 Family Law Sharon Episode: "The Choice"

      2001 Six Feet Under Amelia Episode: "The Foot"

      2001 Inside Schwartz Bernice Episode: "Play-Action Fake Boyfriend"

      2001 7th Heaven Sally Palmer Episode: "Parents"

      2002 7th Heaven Sally Palmer Episode: "Hot Pants"

      2002 Secret Life of Zoey, The The Secret Life of Zoey Mimi TV film

      2002 Less than Perfect Roz Episode: "Future Shock"

      2002 Curb Your Enthusiasm Barbara Episodes: "Chet's Shirt", "Krazee-Eyez Killa", "The Grand Opening"

      2002 One on One Cheryl Ballard Episode: "Give'm an Inch, They'll Throw a Rave"

      2003 One on One Cheryl Ballard Episode: "Keeping It"

      2003 Miss Match Judy Schiff Episode: "The Love Bandit"

      2004 Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman Madeleine TV film

      2004 One on One Cheryl Ballard Episode: "No More Wire Hangers"

      2005 Malcolm in the Middle Ida Schultz Episode: "Pilot"

      2005 Girlfriends Michele Garrett Episode: "All God's Children"

      2006 Shark Judge Sylvia Howard Episode: "Fashion Police"

      2007 Brothers & Sisters Elise Episode: "Sexual Politics"

      2007 Entourage Sheila Rubenstein Episode: "The Return of the King"

      2007 Grey's Anatomy Connie Episode: "Let the Truth Sting"

      2008 Boston Legal Phyllis Goulet Episode: "True Love"

      2009 Monk Sheila Dorfman Episode: "Mr. Monk and the Magician"

      2009 Desperate Housewives Daphne Bicks Episode: "Boom Crunch"

      2010 Young and the Restless, The The Young and the Restless JoJoTV series

      2010 Players Olivia DiMarco Episode: "Krista's Mom"

      2010 Private Practice Stephanie Episode: "War"

      2011 Happy Endings Pauline Blum Episode: "Mein Coming Out"

      2011 Franklin & Bash Judge Rebecca Bayles Episode: "You Can't Take It With You"

      2012 Rizzoli & Isles Dana Episode: "Class Action Satisfaction"

      2012 Up All Night Marla Episode: "First Snow"

      2013 2 Broke Girls Wiga Episode: "And the Psychic Shakedown"

      2013 Franklin & Bash Judge Rebecca Bayles Episode: "Coffee and Cream"

      2016 Life in Pieces Karyl Episode: "CryTunes Divorce Tablet Ring"

 

As producer

2001 : All Over the Guy

 

References

Interview with Jewish Journal dated 9/2005 gave her age as 48;

Caroline Aaron Biography

Jewish Journal.com

Caroline Aaron Biography

"Biography for Caroline Aaron"   External links

Caroline Aaron

Caroline Aaron

Caroline Aaron

Caroline Aaron


Ziafat 1374

۱۹ بازديد
نام فيلم: ضيافت

 

 

كارگردان: مسعود كيميايي

 

سال توليد: 1374

 

موضوع: اجتماعي / حادثه اي

 

بازيگران: فريبرز عرب نيا ، بهزاد خداويسي ، حسن جوهرچي ، پارسا پيروزفر ، رامين پرچمي ، اكبر معزي ، محمد رجبي ، مهدي خيامي ، شهرزاد عبدالمجيد ، يدالله رضواني …

 

خلاصه داستان فيلم ضيافت:

 

هفت دوست سال ها پيش قرار گذاشته اند كه چند سال بعد در روز مشخصي بار ديگر در پاتوق هميشگي شان گرد هم بيايند. در روز تعيين شده همه با هيئت هاي تغيير يافته حاضر مي شوند به غير از رامين كه اكنون وكيل شده و براي شركتي به مديريت مهياران كار مي كند. رامين ناخواسته وارد كارهاي خلاف قانون رئيس شركت شده و اكنون كه ديگر حاضر به همكاري با آن ها نبوده او را به مرگ تهديد كرده اند و او از ترس جانش به مكان امني پناه مي برد و همسرش را به جاي خود بر سر قرار مي فرستد تا از دوستان قديميش براي نجات او كمك بگيرد…

 

………………………….

 

ضيافت، نام فيلمي از مسعود كيميايي است . در اين فيلم فريبرز عرب نيا و پارسا پيروزفر به ايفاي نقش پرداخته اند . اين فيلم در در سال ۱۳۷۴ اكران عمومي شد.


Filmmaking

۲۳ بازديد

 

Filmmaking (or in an academic context, film production) is the process of making a film.

Filmmaking involves a number of discrete stages including an initial story, idea, or commission, through scriptwriting, casting, shooting, sound recording and reproduction, editing, and screening the finished product before an audience that may result in a film release and exhibition.

Filmmaking takes place in many places around the world in a range of economic, social, and political contexts, and using a variety of technologies and cinematic techniques.

Typically, it involves a large number of people, and can take from a few months to several years to complete.

Stages of production

Film production consists of five major stages:

Development — The first stage in which the ideas for the film are created, rights to books/plays are bought etc., and the screenplay is written.

Financing for the project has to be sought and greenlit.

Pre-production—Preparations are made for the shoot, in which cast and film crew are hired, locations are selected, and sets are built.

Production—The raw elements for the film are recorded during the film shoot.

Post-production—The images, sound, and visual effects of the recorded film are edited.

Distribution—The finished film is distributed and screened in cinemas and/or released to home video.

Development[edit]In this stage, the project producer selects a story, which may come from a book, play, another film, true story, video game, comic book, graphic novel, or an original idea, etc.

After identifying a theme or underlying message, the producer works with writers to prepare a synopsis.

Next they produce a step outline, which breaks the story down into one-paragraph scenes that concentrate on dramatic structure.

Then, they prepare a treatment, a 25-to-30-page description of the story, its mood, and characters.

This usually has little dialogue and stage direction, but often contains drawings that help visualize key points.

Another way is to produce a scriptment once a synopsis is produced.

Next, a screenwriter writes a screenplay over a period of several months.

The screenwriter may rewrite it several times to improve dramatization, clarity, structure, characters, dialogue, and overall style.

However, producers often skip the previous steps and develop submitted screenplays which investors, studios, and other interested parties assess through a process called script coverage.

A film distributor may be contacted at an early stage to assess the likely market and potential financial success of the film.

Hollywood distributors adopt a hard-headed business approach and consider factors such as the film genre, the target audience, the historical success of similar films, the actors who might appear in the film, and potential directors.

All these factors imply a certain appeal of the film to a possible audience.

Not all films make a profit from the theatrical release alone, so film companies take DVD sales and worldwide distribution rights into account.

The producer and screenwriter prepare a film pitch, or treatment, and present it to potential financiers.

They will also pitch the film to actors and directors (especially so-called bankable stars) in order to "attach" them to the project (that is, obtain a binding promise to work on the film if financing is ever secured).

Many projects fail to move beyond this stage and enter so-called development hell.

If a pitch succeeds, a film receives a "green light", meaning someone offers financial backing: typically a major film studio, film council, or independent investor. The parties involved negotiate a deal and sign contracts.

Once all parties have met and the deal has been set, the film may proceed into the pre-production period.

By this stage, the film should have a clearly defined marketing strategy and target audience.

Development of animated films differs slightly in that it is the director who develops and pitches a story to an executive producer on the basis of rough storyboards, and it is rare for a full-length screenplay to already exist at that point in time.

If the film is green-lighted for further development and pre-production, then a screenwriter is later brought in to prepare the screenplay.

Pre-production

Main article: Pre-production

In pre-production, every step of actually creating the film is carefully designed and planned.

The production company is created and a production office established.

The film is pre-visualized by the director, and may be storyboarded with the help of illustrators and concept artists.

A production budget is drawn up to plan expenditures for the film.

For major productions, insurance is procured to protect against accidents.

The producer hires a crew. The nature of the film, and the budget, determine the size and type of crew used during filmmaking.

Many Hollywood blockbusters employ a cast and crew of hundreds, while a low-budget, independent film may be made by a skeleton crew of eight or nine (or fewer).

These are typical crew positions:

Storyboard artist: creates visual images to help the director and production designer communicate their ideas to the production team.

Director: is primarily responsible for the storytelling, creative decisions and acting of the film.

Assistant director (AD): manages the shooting schedule and logistics of the production, among other tasks. There are several types of AD, each with different responsibilities.

Unit production manager: manages the production budget and production schedule.

They also report, on behalf of the production office, to the studio executives or financiers of the film.

Location manager: finds and manages film locations. Nearly all pictures feature segments that are shot in the controllable environment of a studio sound stage, while outdoor sequences call for filming on location.

Production designer: creates the visual conception of the film, working with the art director.

Art director: manages the art department, which makes production sets

Costume designer: creates the clothing for the characters in the film working closely with the actors, as well as other departments.

Make up and hair designer: works closely with the costume designer in addition to create a certain look for a character.

Casting director: finds actors to fill the parts in the script. This normally requires that actors audition.

Choreographer creates and coordinates the movement and dance - typically for musicals. Some films also credit a fight choreographer.

Director of photography (DP): is the cinematographer who supervises the photography of the entire film.

Director of audiography (DA): is the audiographer who supervises the audiography of the entire film. For productions in the Western world this role is also known as either sound designer or supervising sound editor.

Production sound mixer: is the head of the sound department during the production stage of filmmaking.

They record and mix the   audio on set - dialogue, presence and sound effects in mono and ambience in stereo.

They work with the boom operator, Director, DA, DP, and First AD.

Sound designer: creates the aural conception of the film, working with the supervising sound editor.

On some productions the sound designer plays the role of a director of audiography.

Composer: creates new music for the film. (usually not until post-production)

Production

See also: Cinematography, Audiography and Principal photography

In production, the video production/film is created and shot. More crew will be recruited at this stage, such as the property master, script supervisor, assistant directors, stills photographer, picture editor, and sound editors.

These are just the most common roles in filmmaking; the production office will be free to create any unique blend of roles to suit the various responsibilities possible during the production of a film.

A typical day's shooting begins with the crew arriving on the set/location by their call time. Actors usually have their own separate call times.

Since set construction, dressing and lighting can take many hours or even days, they are often set up in advance.

The grip, electric and production design crews are typically a step ahead of the camera and sound departments: for efficiency's sake, while a scene is being filmed, they are already preparing the next one.

While the crew prepare their equipment, the actors are wardrobed in their costumes and attend the hair and make-up departments.

The actors rehearse the script and blocking with the director, and the camera and sound crews rehearse with them and make final tweaks.

Finally, the action is shot in as many takes as the director wishes. Most American productions follow a specific procedure:

The assistant director (AD) calls "picture is up!" to inform everyone that a take is about to be recorded, and then "quiet, everyone!"

 Once everyone is ready to shoot, the AD calls "roll sound" (if the take involves sound), and the production sound mixer will start their equipment, record a verbal slate of the take's information, and announce "sound speed", or just "speed", when they are ready.

The AD follows with "roll camera", answered by "speed!" by the camera operator once the camera is recording.

The clapper, who is already in front of the camera with the clapperboard, calls "marker!" and slaps it shut. If the take involves extras or background action, the AD will cue them ("action background!"), and last is the director, telling the actors "action!".

The AD may echo "action" louder on large sets.

A take is over when the director calls "cut!", and camera and sound stop recording.

The script supervisor will note any continuity issues and the sound and camera teams log technical notes for the take on their respective report sheets.

If the director decides additional takes are required, the whole process repeats.

Once satisfied, the crew moves on to the next camera angle or "setup," until the whole scene is "covered."

When shooting is finished for the scene, the assistant director declares a "wrap" or "moving on," and the crew will "strike," or dismantle, the set for that scene.

At the end of the day, the director approves the next day's shooting schedule and a daily progress report is sent to the production office.

This includes the report sheets from continuity, sound, and camera teams.

Call sheets are distributed to the cast and crew to tell them when and where to turn up the next shooting day.

Later on, the director, producer, other department heads, and, sometimes, the cast, may gather to watch that day or yesterday's footage, called dailies, and review their work.

With workdays often lasting 14 or 18 hours in remote locations, film production tends to create a team spirit.

When the entire film is in the can, or in the completion of the production phase, it is customary for the production office to arrange a wrap party, to thank all the cast and crew for their efforts.

For the production phase on live-action films, synchronizing work schedules of key cast and crew members is very important, since for many scenes, several cast members and most of the crew must be physically present at the same place at the same time (and bankable stars may need to rush from one project to another).

Animated films have different workflow at the production phase, in that voice talent can record their takes in the recording studio at different times and may not see one another until the film's premiere, while most physical live-action tasks are either unnecessary or are simulated by various types of animators.

Post-production

Main article: Post-production

Here the video/film is assembled by the video/film editor. The shot film material is edited.

The production sound (dialogue) is also edited; music tracks and songs are composed and recorded if a film is sought to have a score; sound effects are designed and recorded.

Any computer-graphic visual effects are digitally added.

Finally, all sound elements are mixed into "stems", which are then married to picture, and the film is fully completed ("locked").

Distribution

Main articles: Film distribution and Film promotion

This is the final stage, where the film is released to cinemas or, occasionally, directly to consumer media (DVD, VCD, VHS, Blu-ray) or direct download from a digital media provider.

The film is duplicated as required (either onto reels or hard disk drives) and distributed to cinemas for exhibition (screening).

Press kits, posters, and other advertising materials are published, and the film is advertised and promoted.

A B-roll clip may be released to the press based on raw footage shot for a "making of" documentary, which may include making-of clips as well as on-set interviews.

Film distributors usually release a film with a launch party, a red-carpet premiere, press releases, interviews with the press, press preview screenings, and film festival screenings.

Most films are also promoted with their own special website separate from those of the production company or distributor.

For major films, key personnel are often contractually required to participate in promotional tours in which they appear at premieres and festivals, and sit for interviews with many TV, print, and online journalists.

The largest productions may require more than one promotional tour, in order to rejuvenate audience demand at each release window.

Since the advent of home video in the early 1980s, most major films have followed a pattern of having several distinct release windows.

A film may first be released to a few select cinemas, or if it tests well enough, may go directly into wide release.

Next, it is released, normally at different times several weeks (or months) apart, into different market segments like rental, retail, pay-per-view, in-flight entertainment, cable, satellite, and/or free-to-air broadcast television.

The distribution rights for the film are also usually sold for worldwide distribution. The distributor and the production company share profits.

Independent filmmaking

Main article: Independent film

Filmmaking also takes place outside of the mainstream and is commonly called independent filmmaking.

Since the introduction of DV technology, the means of production have become more democratized.

Filmmakers can conceivably shoot and edit a film, create and edit the sound and music, and mix the final cut on a home computer.

However, while the means of production may be democratized, financing, traditional distribution, and marketing remain difficult to accomplish outside the traditional system.

 In the past, most independent filmmakers have relied on film festivals (such as Sundance, Venice, Cannes and Toronto film festivals) to get their films noticed and sold for distribution and production.

However, the Internet has allowed for relatively inexpensive distribution of independent films on websites such as YouTube.

As a result, several companies have emerged to assist filmmakers in getting independent movies seen and sold via mainstream internet marketplaces, often adjacent to popular Hollywood titles.

With internet movie distribution, independent filmmakers who fail to garner a traditional distribution deal now have the ability to reach global audiences.

See also

  Film

  35 mm film

  Audiography

  Cinematic techniques

  Cinematography

  Director of audiography a.k.a. Sound Director, Director of Sound

  Film crew

  Film director

  Film editing

  Film title design

  Film industry

  Film producer

  Film school

  Film studies

  First look deal

  List of film-related topics

  Movie production incentives in the United States

  Outline of film

  Post-production

  Pre-production

  Screenplay

  Screenwriter

  Television

References

Steiff, Josef (2005). The Complete Idiot's Guide to Independent Filmmaking. Alpha Books. pp. 26–28.

Sound-On-Film by Vincent LoBrutto (1994)

Film Sound: Theory and Practice, Edited by Elisabeth Weis and John Belton, Columbia University Press (1985) - Page 361

Sound for Digital Video by Tomlinson Holman (Focal Press) 2005 (p. 162)

Dialogue Editing for Motion Pictures by John Purcell (Focal Press) 2007 (p. 148)

See  More

MAIN Encyclopedia   CINEMA  FILMS Category

External links

Filmmaking 

Internet Filmmaker's FAQ 


The American Guild of Variety Artists

۱۸ بازديد

The American Guild of Variety Artists (AGVA) is an AFL-CIO-affiliated labor union founded in 1939 to represent performing artists and stage managers for live performances in the variety field. The variety area of performance includes singers & dancers in touring shows and in theatrical revues (non-book shows...book revues may be under Actors’ Equity jurisdiction), theme park performers, skaters, circus performers, comedians & stand-up comics, cabaret & club artists,lecturers/poets/monologists/spokespersons, and variety performers working at private parties & special events.

Performers appear under AGVA contracts at Radio City Music Hall and around the world in various Radio City Spectaculars starring the Rockettes, at theme parks such as Disneyland, Universal Studios & Magic Mountain, and in hundreds of revues in New York and across the country (including such regularly-produced favorites as Beehive, Sugar Babies, Swing, Our Sinatra, NEWSical, Ring of Fire, Political Idol, Showtune, Watercoolers, Dame Edna, & others).

Tony Award winning AGVA shows have included: Black & Blue, Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music, Jackie Mason, Dame Edna, Fool Moon, Def Poetry Jam, and others.

In the past and currently, notable stars of Broadway, film, and television appear under AGVA contracts on Broadway, on tour, and across the nation in their one-person shows frequently with accompanying singers & dancers - some of these include Liza Minnelli, Bea Arthur, Tony Bennett, Harry Belafonte, Patti LuPone, Jackie Mason, Lena Horne, Tommy Tune, etc.

When AGVA artists appear in dramatic shows, in the broadcast media such as film/television/radio, or in Internet performances, the appropriate unions for those type of performances have jurisdiction (Equity, SAG, AFTRA).

AGVA is a branch of The Associated Actors and Artistes of America (commonly referred to as “The 4 A’s”), which is the parent union to AGVA, as well as to other performer unions such as Actors’ Equity Association (AEA), Screen Actors Guild (SAG), American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA), and Guild of Italian American Actors (GIAA, formerly Italian Actors Union, IAU). These are our sister unions,and we are all branches under the same parent union - “The 4 A’s. Each of these unions gets its operating Charter from the 4 A's (AFTRA also has a separate Charter from the AFL-CIO).

AGVA, in accordance with industry standards and Federal labor regulations, negotiates, sets and enforces salary minimums, as well as conditions of employment such as, rehearsal & performance hours, overtime provisions, safe & sanitary work conditions, travel stipulations, vacation & sick pay, publicity & promotion, audition procedures, and general work rules.

AGVA members accrue medical, dental and optical coverage while employed under our contracts, as well as beyond the term of the contract & after the period of time actually worked, based on the benefits plan of the AGVA Welfare Trust Fund, the union’s self-insured Plan.

Longtime AGVA members (membership of 5 consecutive years or more, in good standing) may receive medical benefits, without working under additional contracts and without charge, under AGVA Plan B coverage. A summary of the various benefit plans for which AGVA members are eligible can be found elsewhere on this website or from AGVA Welfare Trust Fund, 17th Floor, 363 7th Avenue, N.Y., N.Y. 10001 (212-627-4820).

AGVA also offers its current and previous members emergency aid through the AGVA Sick & Relief Fund. Once a need has been verified, the AGVA Sick & Relief Fund will pay a variety of bills such as rent, utilities, telephone, etc. as well as give emergency grants. All grants are confidential and these grants are handled through a separate office to ensure privacy. Information about this is located elsewhere on this website or through the AGVA Sick & Relief Fund office at 212-675-1003 Ext. 105.

The AGVA Sick & Relief Fund also regularly contributes to other industry-related charities which benefit AGVA members such as the Actors’ Fund, Episcopal Actors’ Guild, Catholic Actors Guild, Better Wellness, the New York Health Fair, Phyllis Newman Women’s Health Initiative, Central Labor Rehabilitation Council, St. Malachy’s Actor’s Chapel, various telethons, etc.

The AGVA Sick & Relief Fund also presents regular variety shows using the talents of AGVA member performers (for which they are paid a fee for expenses) at various senior citizen facilities, hospitals, care centers, schools, and public service locations throughout the country. Information about appearing in/or booking these AGVA Sick & Relief Shows may be obtained from the AGVA offices in New York and Los Angeles or on our website.


Diahnne Abbott

۲۰ بازديد


MOVIE ACTRESS

BIRTHDAY
January 1, 1945
BIRTHPLACE
New York
AGE
70 years old
BIRTH SIGN
Capricorn

 

ABOUT
American actress who has appeared in films such as New York, New York in 1977 and Love Streams in 1984.
BEFORE FAME
She had one of her first roles as Concession Girl in the 1976 film Taxi Driver.
TRIVIA
She appeared in three episodes of the television series Crime Story in 1988.
FAMILY LIFE
She was married to actor Robert De Niro from 1976 until 1988 and they had two children.
ASSOCIATED WITH

 

She was married to Robert De Niro from 1976 until 1988 and they had two children.

See also


Motion Pictures

۲۲ بازديد


The Associated Actors & Artistes of America

۳۲ بازديد

The Associated Actors & Artistes of America, the 95-year-old labor organization through which all of the entertainment industry’s performers unions once were affiliated to the AFL-CIO, will be turning over all of its administrative functions to the AFL-CIO beginning in June. The move puts the Four A’s a step closer to going out of business, though that day might not be coming anytime soon. “Most of the functions of the Four A’s will be turned over to the AFL-CIO’s Department of Professional Employees, which covers white-collar workers,” longtime Four A’s President Theodore Bikel told Deadline. “That transfer will take place pretty soon, but the Four A’s is not going out of business. If there are any jurisdictional disputes between the actors unions, the Four A’s will still be around to help resolve the problem. But eventually, I hope that that too will be taken over by the AFL-CIO.”
Founded in 1919 during the days of vaudeville and silent movies, the main function of the Four A’s was to resolve jurisdictional disputes between more than a dozen competing actors unions gathered under its umbrella. Most of those unions went extinct years ago, however, and with the merger of SAG and AFTRA – which Bikel helped nurture – there just aren’t that many jurisdictional disputes to resolve anymore. There are still occasional flare-ups between the live performers unions – Actors’ Equity, the American Guild of Musical Artists and the American Guild of Variety Artists – but Bikel hopes that they too will one day merge into one union. “My ambition has been, and continues to be, the merger of all the live performers unions,” said Bikel, who turns 90 on May 2. Asked when such a merger might take place, he said: “As we say in Jewish folklore, ‘When the Messiah comes.’ But I trust that it can happen because it’s been shown, with the merger of SAG and AFTRA, that it can happen.”

Every actors union in America originally received its charter with the AFL-CIO through the Four A’s, but that also has changed in recent years as the role of the Four A’s has become smaller and smaller. AFTRA cut out the Four A’s as a middleman and got its own national charter directly from the AFL-CIO in 2008, and following the merger, SAG-AFTRA did the same thing in 2012. Actors’ Equity followed suit, bypassing the Four A’s altogether and receiving its own national charter from the AFL-CIO last year.
The only performers unions that still get their AFL-CIO charters through the Four A’s are the American Guild of Musical Artists, the American Guild of Variety Artists, and, with only 79 members, the Guild of Italian American Actors. Combined, those three unions represent only about 10,000 members, which is a fraction of the 214,000 actors represented by SAG-AFTRA and Equity.

Like the long-extinct Burlesque Actors’ Association it once represented, the Four A’s has become something of a relic of the distant past. It has no website or offices, and its mailing address is Apt. #3 C in an apartment building in Port Chester, NY. According to its latest financial filing with the U.S. Department of Labor, the Four A’s has no paid staff – Bikel and treasurer Thomas Jamerson work without salary. It spent zero dollars on “representational activities,” paid no taxes, and spent only $7,273 for “union administration” – Bikel’s expense account for travel, meals, lodging and the like while conducting official union business. Up until a few years ago, the Four A’s had an office at Actors’ Equity headquarters in New York City, but when Equity remodeled, there wasn’t room for the Four A’s anymore – a move that was symbolic of the Four A’s diminishing role as a labor organization.

Even its name is antiquated. Who calls themselves “artistes” anymore?

But until the live performers unions merge, Bikel has no intention of retiring. “ ‘Retiring’ – within that word is tiring,” he laughed, “and I’m not tired. I don’t believe in retirement, really.” But he does hope to see the day when the Four A’s can retire. “If I get the live performers union to merge, I can safely say that the Four A’s can go out of business entirely,” he said. “I became president to make sure it goes out of business with dignity.”

That was 25 years ago.

Bikel, who served as president of Actors’ Equity Association from 1973-82, has devoted much of his long life to helping actors and actors unions, and every actor in America owes him a debt of gratitude.

“Theo Bikel is a mensch, a tireless force for good, having served his fellow actors as union leader for more than 20 years and lending his voice to significant issues of the day,” said Nick Wyman, president of Actors’ Equity. “He has had a remarkable, multi-faceted career and there are very few who loved their union more, fought as passionately for what mattered, or honored their craft as much as Theo.”

That career also has included roles in more than 150 films and TV shows, ranging from The African Queen to JAG, and countless stage productions. He earned an Oscar nomination in 1960 for his supporting role in The Defiant Ones; the same year, he was nominated for a Tony for originating the role of Captain von Trapp in The Sound of Music on Broadway. He also has recorded more than two dozen albums of folk music.

A 90th birthday celebration, featuring singers Arlo Guthrie, Peter Yarrow and Tom Paxton, will be held June 16 at the Saban Theatre in Beverly Hills. Leaders from many of the industry’s labor unions are expected to be on hand to express their gratitude to Bikel for all his many years of service to the cause of actors and to unionism.


THE FILM ENCYCLOPEDIA

۱۹ بازديد

THE FILM ENCYCLOPEDIA

 

Contents

 

Abbreviations

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

X

Y

Z

 

About the Author

This work is a one-man project. It has taken many years to compile, and its scope has gradually expanded far beyond the original plan because of my desire to include much information that can be found elsewhere only in a wide variety of sources or that is treated sketchily in other works. My aim, in fact, was to make it the most comprehensive one-volume encyclopedia of world cinema ever published in the English language.

Every consideration has been given to the range and depth of material, even when this has meant sacrificing features that would have made the book superficially attractive. Although the publishers and I would like to have used photographs to enliven this text on one of the most visual of arts, we hope the reader will agree that omitting them was better than skimping on entries and information, which would have been necessary if photographs had been included. At my suggestion, the publishers have agreed to drop an entire category of subjects—the factual and critical survey of specific motion pictures. Even a modest sampling of the thousands of notable films would have added hundreds of pages to this already hefty volume, and the selection would have been severely limited in both number of titles and information about them. We have, then, elected to disappoint the natural expectations of our audience rather than risk its protest with half-measures.

In the present volume I have concentrated on a broad range of entries about filmmakers and filmmaking with, I trust, a good balance of American, British, and international subjects. Country by country, the history of major film industries is covered from its inception to the present day. Important film-related organizations and events are discussed; inventions, techniques, processes, equipment, and technical terms are explained in language that is at once precise and easy to follow. The numerous biographies of directors, producers, screenwriters, cinematographers, art directors, composers, film editors, stars, and featured players are sufficiently rich in personal and professional details (including, in most cases, day of birth and education) to please both the film scholar and the movie fan. Complete filmographies accompany the entries of most directors and of all major stars. The film credits of other personalities are extensive and carefully selected to represent their most important work.

Looking back on the years I have invested in this volume, perhaps my most sobering discovery was that an open-ended ratio exists between one unit of fact and multiple units of time. For every hour of actual writing time that went into the preparation of the encyclopedia, I must have spent ten hours of research—checking, cross-checking, and rechecking every fact in a great variety of sources in my own vast library and in outside facilities with film collections. I have tried, to the best of my ability, to resolve conflicts between sources of information and to correct factual distortions that have been perpetuated in film literature over the years. But in a work of this size, a degree of oversight is inevitable, and I beg the indulgence of the reader if, after all, some errors have crept in.

As with any work of magnitude, this encyclopedia was seen into print with the aid of many people, and I am indebted to all of them.

Editor’s Note

It is an honor to continue my long association with The Film Encyclopedia. The book remains an invaluable basic resource, featuring many new faces and facts as well as the latest news about the creative forces that make up the rapidly changing world of cinema as it moves further into the digital age.

I continue to keep the promise of not eliminating any of the more than 8,000 entries. As always, it is sometimes necessary to tighten some existing entries in order to adhere to the finite number of pages the publisher is able to bind.

I suppose I am likely to always be a late-nighter, working into the wee hours. And so . . . another edition comes to a close.

For Maryam and Ali and Ghazal . . . you own my heart.

 

Note to the Reader

The subjects of the encyclopedia are presented in alphabetical order. There is, therefore, no index, but the text is liberally cross-referenced to direct the reader to all entries that contain related or complementary information. The cross-references are indicated with the use of small capitals: BELUSHI; CLAPSTICKS; CINEMASCOPE.

In a biography, the heading “FILMS” indicates that what follows is a complete list of credits, either for the professional capacity given in the biography after the person’s name or for the function specified in the filmography itself. A partial listing is headed “FILMS INCLUDE.” When it is not otherwise apparent, the national origin of a film, or the country in which it was produced, is shown by giving the country’s name after the title, in parentheses and usually abbreviated.

A slash separating titles in the credits means that what follows is an alternate title, in the same language as the original, in a second or third language for an international co-production, or for the release in a country other than that of origin. A slash used with country designations means that the film was a co-production of the two or more nations named.

Dates given with film titles are almost always the years of first release for general screening. For some films, however, the date reflects the year of a premiere (as when an American picture was screened near the end of a year to qualify it for the Academy Awards) or the year that the film was completed (as for some European films for which release dates could not be ascertained).

In some credits, a single film title is in most cases the title given the production in the country of origin. Whenever possible, original titles are given for pictures made in English, French, Spanish, Italian, and German. Titles of those made in less familiar languages (Swedish, Japanese, Russian, etc.) are those under which they have been released in the United States or in the United Kingdom. When no record of release in English-speaking countries is available, what is shown for a title in one of the unfamiliar languages is either a literal translation or the English rendering of an untranslatable title.

 

Abbreviations

Most of the abbreviations in the film credits, as for countries, are common enough to be self-explanatory. The list below identifies those that might not be readily apparent.

Alg. Algeria

Aus. Austria

Austral. Australia

Brz. Brazil

Can. Canada

Eg. Egypt

Gr. Greece

phot. director of photography, cinematographer

scr. screenplay writer, scenarist

supvr. production supervisor

Sw. Sweden

Switz. Switzerland

 

A

AAAA (Associated Actors and Artistes of America).

The parent organization incorporating seven major unions and guilds representing actors and entertainers in the US, such as Actors Equity Association (AEA), the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), the American Guild of Variety Artists (AGVA), and the Screen Actors Guild (SAG).

Based in New York City, the “four A’s” was organized in 1919 and is affiliated with the AFL-CIO. Membership is close to 200,000.

 

AADA. Commonly used abbreviation for the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, the oldest actors’ training school in the English-speaking world.

The Academy was founded in 1884 in New York City by Franklin Haven Sargent and was first known as the Lyceum Theatre School for Acting, later changing its name to the New York School for Acting, and finally to its present name.

The curriculum emphasizes dramatic stage training but also includes classes in television and film.

A West Coast campus of the AADA was founded in 1974, in Pasadena, Calif. Famous alumni of the school include Armand ASSANTE, Lauren BACALL, Anne BANCROFT, John CASSAVETES, Hume CRONYN, Cecil B. DE MILLE, Danny DE VITO, Colleen DEWHURST, Kirk DOUGLAS, Nina FOCH, Ruth GORDON, Jennifer JONES, Garson KANIN, Grace KELLY, Agnes MOOREHEAD, Pat O’BRIEN, William POWELL, Robert REDFORD, Edward G. ROBINSON, Rosalind RUSSELL, Joseph SCHILDKRAUT, Annabella SCIORRA, Spencer TRACY, Claire TREVOR, Robert WALKER, and Peter WELLER.

 

A and B Editing. A method of editing that requires the use of two rolls of film in the preparation of a master print. By alternating pictures from one of the rolls with a blank LEADER from the other roll, DISSOLVES and other effects can easily be achieved. Both rolls have a common CUE MARK. Roll A contains all the scenes up to the first dissolve, followed by a strip of blank leader for the scene to be dissolved. Roll B contains a blank leader up to the first dissolve, followed by the scene into which the dissolve is to be made. Until the next dissolve is reached, roll B then contains the picture scenes, while roll A consists of a blank leader. The process of alternating blank leaders and scenes is continued until all dissolves, FADES, and other effects have been introduced. The system is also useful in eliminating visible splices in the editing of 16mm film.

 

Abbott, Bud. Actor. b. William A. Abbott, Oct. 2, 1895, Asbury Park, N.J. d. 1974 of cancer. Snide straight man of the ABBOTT AND COSTELLO comedy team. The son of a circus couple, he grew up on Coney Island and at age 15 was Mickey-Finned and shanghaied aboard a ship bound for Norway. Unsuccessful at repeated attempts to break into show business, it was while he was working as a cashier at a Brooklyn theater in 1931 that a new career began for him when he was asked to substitute for comedian Lou Costello’s ailing straight man. After the team split up in 1957,

Abbott made a weak attempt at resuming his stage and TV career alone and with another partner. He suffered a series of strokes and spent his last years in retirement. See also ABBOTT AND COSTELLO; COSTELLO, LOU.

 

Abbott, Diahnne. Actress. b. 1945, New York City. Stately, voluptuous African-American actress best known for supporting and character roles. She is the former wife of actor Robert DE NIRO, with whom she appeared in Taxi Driver, New York New York (where she sang “Honeysuckle Rose”), and The King of Comedy.

FILMS INCLUDE: Taxi Driver 1976; New York New York, Welcome to L.A. 1977; The King of Comedy 1983; Love Streams 1984; Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling 1986; Before Night Falls 2000; Soliloquy 2002.

 

Abbott, George. Playwright, director, producer, screenwriter. b. June 25, 1887, Forestville, N.Y. d. 1995. ed. Rochester U.; Harvard. Legendary Broadway personality. Began his career as an actor in 1913. He later wrote numerous plays, often in collaboration, and directed and produced many others on Broadway. Several of his plays were adapted by others to the screen, including ‘Broadway,’ ‘Coquette,’ ‘Lilly Turner,’ ‘Three Men on a Horse,’ ‘On Your Toes,’ and ‘The Boys from Syracuse.’ He moved to Hollywood during the switch to sound, collaborated on the script of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), and directed a number of films, usually supplying his own scripts. In 1931 he returned to the stage and subsequently directed only three films, two of them screen adaptations of his stage musicals, ‘The Pajama Game’ and ‘Damn Yankees.’ He also produced several films, including Boy Meets Girl (1938). Among the numerous hits he directed for the stage were ‘Twentieth Century’ (1932), ‘Boy Meets Girl’ (1935), ‘Room Service’ (1937), ‘Pal Joey’ (1940), ‘On the Town’ (1944), ‘Where’s Charley?’ (1948), ‘Call Me Madam’ (1950), ‘A Tree Grows in Brooklyn’ (1951), ‘Wonderful Town’ (1953), ‘The Pajama Game’ (1954), ‘Damn Yankees’ (1955), ‘Fiorello!’ (1959), and ‘A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum’ (1962). In 1983, at the age of 95 (!) he directed and co-produced a Broadway revival of ‘On Your Toes.’ In 1993, at 105, he joined in festivities celebrating Broadway’s 100th anniversary. Autobiography: Mister Abbott (1963).

FILMS INCLUDE: As director—The Impostor 1918; Why Bring That Up? (also dial., co-scr.), Half-Way to Heaven (also scr.) 1929; Manslaughter (also scr.), The Sea God (also scr.) 1930; Stolen Heaven (also scr.), Secrets of a Secretary (also scr.), My Sin (also scr.), The Cheat (also scr.) 1931; Too Many Girls (also prod.) 1940; The Pajama Game (co-dir., co-prod. with Stanley Donen; also co-scr. with Richard Bissell from their own stage musical) 1957; Damn Yankees (co-dir., co-prod. with Donen; also scr. from the stage musical he co-wrote with Douglass Wallop) 1958.

 

Abbott, L. B. Special effects technician. b. Lenwood Ballard Abbott, June 13, 1908, Pasadena, Calif., the son of a silent film cinematographer. d. 1985. Among Hollywood’s leading trick photography experts. He won Oscars for Dr. Doolittle (1967), Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), and Logan’s Run (1976), as well as several Emmys for his TV work.

FILMS INCLUDE: The Three Faces of Eve, The Enemy Below, Peyton Place 1957; The Long Hot Summer, The Roots of Heaven, South Pacific, The Fly, The Young Lions 1958; The Diary of Anne Frank, Journey to the Center of the Earth 1959; From the Terrace, The Lost World, North to Alaska 1960; Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 1961; Cleopatra 1963; The Agony and the Ecstasy, The Sound of Music 1965; Fantastic Voyage, Our Man Flint 1966; Doctor Doolittle, Valley of the Dolls 1967; The Detective, Planet of the Apes 1968; Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Hello Dolly! 1969; Patton, Tora! Tora! Tora! 1970; The Poseidon Adventure 1972; The Towering Inferno 1974; Logan’s Run 1976; The Swarm 1978; When Time Ran Out 1980.

 

Abbott and Costello. A highly successful comedy team of the 40s and early 50s. They first joined forces in 1931, with tall, slim Abbott playing straight man to short, chubby Costello, and soon were headliners on the vaudeville and burlesque circuit. They broke into radio in 1938 and the following year starred in the Broadway revue ‘Streets of Paris.’ Their first film, One Night in the Tropics (1940), was hardly noticed, but their next, Buck Privates (1941), grossed $10 million and firmly established the team. For the next decade they were included in every list of top-ten box-office grossers. In 1957, after more than 30 broad slapstick films and some success on television, the two broke up. See also ABBOTT, BUD; COSTELLO, LOU.

FILMS INCLUDE: One Night in the Tropics 1940; Buck Privates, In the Navy, Hold That Ghost, Keep ’Em Flying 1941; Ride ’Em Cowboy, Rio Rita, Pardon My Sarong, Who Done It? 1942; It Ain’t Hay, Hit the Ice 1943; In Society, Lost in a Harem 1944; Here Come the Co-Eds, The Naughty Nineties, Abbott and Costello in Hollywood 1945; Little Giant, The Time of Their Lives 1946; Buck Privates Come Home, The Wistful Widow of Wagon Gap 1947; The Noose Hangs High, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, Mexican Hayride 1948; Africa Screams, Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer Boris Karloff 1949; Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion 1950; Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man, Comin’ Round the Mountain 1951; Jack and the Beanstalk, Lost in Alaska, Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd 1952; Abbott and Costello Go to Mars, Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde 1953; Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops, Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy 1955; Dance With Me Henry 1956; The World of Abbott and Costello 1965 (compilation); Entertaining the Troops 1989 (archival footage).

 NEXT