Sentences with phrase «most frequent collaborator»

Merce's most frequent collaborator was his life partner John Cage.
Best known for the work he did in conjunction with Fellini, Italian screenwriter Ennio Flajano and his most frequent collaborator Tulli Pinelli penned many scripts during the»50s and»60s.
Indeed, L.A. could feel far from everything: as Maren Hassinger, one of Nengudi's most frequent collaborators, recently told me, «it was an art desert... a sleepy town.»

Not exact matches

He and frequent collaborator Anders Møller of Université Paris - Sud noticed something unusual in the course of their work in the Red Forest, the most contaminated part of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
His latest, co-written with frequent collaborator Amy Jump, sets itself entirely within a warehouse and eschews the previously - used sheen for a grimy, grainy aesthetic most likely as an homage to the films of Sam Peckinpah, such as STRAW DOGS, THE KILLER ELITE, and THE GETAWAY.
Unlike most of Clooney's outings as a director, which bear the discernible influence of his friend and frequent collaborator Steven Soderbergh, Leatherheads is Clooney's clear attempt to make a Coens - style comedy.
Behind the scenes, the creative team includes frequent collaborators Tom Stern, who served as cinematographer on 13 of Eastwood's previous films, and Deborah Hopper, who has served as Eastwood's costume designer on 17 prior films, editor Blu Murray, who most recently cut «Sully,» and the film's composer, Christian Jacob.
Jake Abel most recently wrapped GOOD KILL for director and frequent collaborator Andrew Niccol.
Though Paul Sarossy's cinematography is icily evocative, frequent Egoyan collaborator Mychael Danna's score suffers from what most politely could be described as a paucity of subtlety.
Set and, at least in part, shot in Georgia's Okefenokee Swamp, it's the director's most Ford - like film, in part thanks to a cast of Ford regulars (among them Walter Brennan, John Carradine, and Ward Bond) and a script by frequent Ford collaborator Dudley Nichols, and in part simply due to Renoir's own sensibilities translated into an American vernacular.
With a total of five collaborations, Bell sits only behind Jackson as the director's most frequent on - screen collaborator.
Perhaps the most frustrating thing about this puerile game is that Favreau knows he makes an art form out of acting like a d - bag — besting frequent collaborator Vaughn in that regard — and yet, at the mercy of his own script, the mere implication of a penis is enough to deflate any potential hilarity he has to offer.
Composer Carter Burwell, one of Haynes» many frequent collaborators, has received the best and most consistently strong reviews for his score which traverses the silent era of the 1920s to the loud garishness of 1970s New York City.
Behind the scenes, the creative team includes frequent collaborators Tom Stern, who served as cinematographer on 13 of Eastwood's previous films, and Deborah Hopper, who has served as Eastwood's costume designer on 17 prior films; editor Blu Murray, who most recently cut «Sully,» and that film's composer, Christian Jacob.
Bringing together a murderer's row of British acting veterans and some of director Edgar Wright's most frequent comic collaborators, it's little surprise that «Hot Fuzz,» the second film in Wright's thematically connected «Three Flavours Cornetto» trilogy, is perhaps the most outrageously funny of all three of them.
Frequent Coogler collaborator Michael B. Jordan as Erik «Killmonger», varying in a slight but important way from his comic book inspiration, joins Michael Keaton in perhaps the most significant MCU development in the last 12 months — they're starting to get their villains right.
«Any Ever», Trecartin's 2011 show at New York's MoMA PS1, was the most fully realized of the artist's video environments to date — mostly made with his frequent collaborator Lizzie Fitch — giving physical form to his potent mixture of the prosaic and the absurd.
Most recently, he teamed up with Takashi Murakami, a frequent Vuitton collaborator, for a show at the Gagosian Gallery in London.
Ferdinand, I started having a look at the relevant papers, and noticed a couple of things: Soden was a co-author of the 2002 Wielicki paper you cite, in 2002 Soden was lead author of yet another paper in Science, this one focused on the effects of the Pinatubo eruption, Wielicki and Wong (also an author of the 2002 Wielicki paper) were in turn co-authors of a 2003 IEEE paper debunking the iris effect, and... how in the world can so many scientists, many of them frequent collaborators, screw up something this fundamental over such a long period of time and have most of it get through peer review in the same prestigious publication?
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