Friday, March 9, 2012

'Old Jews' set off Broadway

Website-inspired Off Broadway play "Old Jews Telling Jokes" will bow Off Broadway within an open-ended commercial run that begins in May. Co-produced by Peter Gethers, the scribe-editor and Random House Films prexy, and journo Daniel Okrent, "Old Jews" is really a five-thesp revue of jokes and tunes both old and new. Marc Bruni, helmer from the approaching Encores! staging of "Fantasy," directs. According to website OldJewsTellingJokes.com, the show hits Off Broadway inside a production backed by Tom Viertel, Marc Routh, Richard Frankel and Steven Baruch, producers from the approaching Rialto tuner "Leap of Belief" in addition to past excursions "Just A Little Evening Music," "Company" and "Sweeney Todd," amongst others. Cast has not yet been introduced for "Old Jews," which starts previews May 1 in front of a May 20 opening at Off Broadway's Westside Theater. Contact Gordon Cox at gordon.cox@variety.com

The Dying Of Poor Joe: BFI Discovers Cell phone industry's Earliest Which makes it through Dickensian Film

This is often a kind of awesome situation of serendipity: The Dying Of Poor Joe can be a 1901 Uk production, directed by G.A. Cruz, and was uncovered the following day from the British Film Institute celebrated the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth. Quiet film curator Bryony Dixon made the invention and her research has proven it’s the very first film made getting a Dickensian character. Right before now, the very first known Dickens film was Scrooge or Marleys Ghost released later in 1901. Carrying out unrelated research, Dixon discovered a catalogue entry mentioning for the Dying Of Poor Joe and thought the title might be a reference to the the level of smoothness in Dickens’ Bleak House. The film existed inside the BFIs collections, but had formerly been listed beneath the title Guy Meets Ragged Boy and wrongly dated c1902. The primary one-minute film is mentioned to remain in excellent condition and may screen to supplement the BFI’s program of Dickens’ pre-1914 shorts. It showed up towards the BFI collection in 1954 incorporated in a number of films in the collector employed in brighton who had known the director. Inside the film, “Poor Jo” is seen throughout the evening against a churchyard wall, freezing throughout the cold several weeks snow along with his broom. A watchman arrives swinging his light and catches Jo as much like he falls lower dying the watchman tries to help nevertheless it’s too far gone while he sticks out his light lower into Jos face, Jo puts his hands together in prayer, while using light for heavenly light while he dies. In line with the BFI, the film has parallels to Hendes Christian Andersons The Little Match Girl and Dickens story of Jo from Bleak House which has similar pathos. It absolutely was shot getting a Biokam device, a combined camera/projector for your amateur market, that was launched in 1899.