7/26/2023 0 Comments Cineplay theater![]() ![]() of the copyright law), every form of utilizing, reproducing or processing works subject to copyright protection on our web pages requires the prior consent of the respective owner of the rights. Unless expressly permitted by law (§ 44a et seq. Our web pages and their contents are subject to German copyright law. Video-Loop material copyright by Knitterfisch GbR ![]() Most photos on this website copyright by Newpic Photograpy, Toni Kretschmer. Should any legal infringement become known to us, we will remove the respective link immediately. No violations were evident to us at the time of linking. Responsibility for the content of external links (to web pages of third parties) lies solely with the operators of the linked pages. Our obligations to remove or block the use of information under generally applicable laws remain unaffected by this as per §§ 8 to 10 of the Telemedia Act (TMG). In this context, please note that we are accordingly not obliged to monitor merely the transmitted or saved information of third parties, or investigate circumstances pointing to illegal activity. According to statutory provisions, we are furthermore responsible for our own content on these web pages. ![]() However, we cannot guarantee the contents' accuracy, completeness or topicality. The contents of our pages have been created with the utmost care. Information in accordance with section 5 TMG »Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung», German daily newspaper A precious, bright toy, you can not easily leave. The further one recedes from the cinema, the more the picture sparkles. Leaving the Open Air Cinema during the show, without turning several times to look at the screen, is hardly possible. One is magically allured by the pictures, projected on the screen, out of the 10.000W projector. The sound is clear, the pictures are brillant – it does not matter what is projected on the 14 x 32m screen after having reached its »play position». Bombastic sounds, blinking lights – the cinema presents itself as an event.Īnd it is exactly that. This creates the impression of a magician, demonstrating his audience, that his cards are real and his sleeves are empty. At first, the screen’s backside greets the visitors with huge grey letters. This rotation does not happen in a simple way, but in a complex series of up-, down-, forward- and backward-movements. To let everybody see, that the mobility of the screen is not only a fake, it rotates during an intro show from a horizontal to a vertical position. Prior to every movie the medium »cinema» shows its potential. He is also the founder and Artistic Director of the Target Stage Company. His play 160 North has been translated into Hindi and adapted for the screen where it was produced by Citoc Motion Pictures/Cineplay in Mumbai.Ĭurrently, Matt is the Artistic Director and Program Director of the Theatre program at Stonehill College in Easton, Massachusetts. His original play, The East, written with Craig Handel, was presented on Dean College’s Main Stage in Franklin, Massachusetts, and was a National Presenting Production at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival Region one. Local directing credits include: American Idiot, In The Heights, Cabaret, Talk Radio, The Crucible, Noises Off, The Boys Next Door, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Little Shop of Horrors and Almost, Maine. His plays/screenplays include The East, CHOKE, For the Love of Dog, 160 North, The Heist, god in a 747, Black Diamond, The Architect, Rattlesnake Suitcase, Son of Valor and The American Dream. A graduate of the University of Connecticut's Drama Department, he has also done graduate work in Directing at Indiana University and holds an MFA in Creative Writing (Stage and Screen) from Lesley University. Matt had the fortune to work alongside Pulitzer Prize, two-time Academy Award and Emmy Award winning Horton Foote while serving as Fight Director on the 50th anniversary production of The Trip to Bountiful at Hartford Stage. A writer, director, actor and fight director, he has more than 70 theater and film credits at such theaters as the Astor Place Theatre (Off-Broadway), Charles Playhouse, Hartford Stage, Boston Theatre Marathon, Connecticut Repertory Theatre, Hartt School of Music, Eastern Conn State Univ., Western Conn State Univ., CCRI, Counter Productions Theatre Co., Dean College, and Carnegie Hall, to name a few. Matt spent six years as a Blue Man in the popular Blue Man Group where he performed more than 1,000 shows, playing in front of millions. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |