Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Browning Version is a play by Terence Rattigan, seen by many as his best work, and first performed on 8 September 1948 at the Phoenix Theatre, London. It was originally one of two short plays, jointly titled "Playbill"; the companion piece being Harlequinade, which forms the second half of the evening.

  2. 18 de nov. de 2016 · The most remarkable thing about Terence Rattigan as a playwright is not the oft-praised (and oft-lamented) theatrical craft of his plays, nor their huge commercial success, nor even the drama of his reputation’s decline in the wake of the Angry Young Man movement and his subsequent rehabilitation; it is rather that from his first play, French Without Tears, to his last play, Cause Célèbre ...

  3. A Bit About Terence Rattigan. Sir Terence Rattigan was a British playwright, dramatist and screenwriter. His themes were often set in an upper middle class context and detailed themes of sexual frustration, failed relationships and repression. Rattigan was born in London in 1911, into a family whereby his father was a diplomat and his ...

  4. 27 de mar. de 2013 · Benedict Cumberbatch, explores the life and work of enigmatic playwright Terence Rattigan in this really interesting documentary first shown in 2011.Read mor...

    • 30 min
    • 121.8K
    • XLadyClaireX
  5. 4 de ene. de 2011 · 100 years after his birth, the playwright is about to become theatre’s greatest comeback kid, says Dominic Cavendish . Once upon a time, back in the Sixties, Terence Rattigan felt so unloved in ...

  6. A Clifton Productions and Hill-Hecht-Lancaster Productions, 1958. Co-adapted from his own play with John Gay, Rattigan was nominated for his second Academy Award for Best Screenplay for 'Separate Tables'. However, two of its stars, David Niven and Wendy Hillier, both won Academy Awards for their acting performances.

  7. Sir Terence Rattigan. Sitter in 31 portraits. Rattigan was born in Kensington and educated at Harrow School and Trinity College Oxford, where he joined the University Dramatic Society. A decade after his first critical success, French Without Tears, Rattigan wrote his most celebrated and enduring works: The Winslow Boy (1946), The Browning ...