12 years ago : Elisabeth Taylor

After many years of ill health, Taylor died from congestive heart failure in 2011, at the age of 79.

Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor was born in Hampstead, London, on Feb. 27, 1932, to art dealer Francis Taylor and Sara, a former stage actress. Her unique beauty inspired her mother to put her into show business, and by age 3 Elizabeth was taking ballet lessons. “I never could kick up my heels like other kids; there were too many restraints,” Taylor wrote in her 1988 memoir Elizabeth Takes Off. “My life was overscheduled and overdisciplined.”

Taylor became one of the most popular actresses of Hollywood’s golden age.

She bounded into the spotlight at age 12 after starring in the 1944 box office sensation “National Velvet.” She won acclaim as an adult with 1951’s “A Place In The Sun” and went on to score best actress Oscar nominations for “Raintree County,” “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” and “Suddenly, Last Summer.”

In 1963, she memorably starred in “Cleopatra.” She later won Oscars for “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and “Butterfield 8.”

Beyond acting, Taylor is credited with bringing the world’s attention to AIDS with her fund-raising and activism. In 1985, when Taylor’s lifelong friend Rock Hudson died of AIDS, she brought national attention to the growing disease. She raised and donated millions of dollars to the cause, founding the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and The Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation.

She was also an entrepreneur, spearheading a successful line of perfume and multiple jewelry lines. In 1999, Taylor was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

She hated being called Liz.

https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/hollywood-icon-elizabeth-taylor-dies-79/story?id=12894882

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Les tableaux du peintre

Painting news project

Twitter

How Australia & New Zealand’s screen sectors are thriving despite the pandemic

As Hollywood continues to grapple with the far-reaching and damaging effects of Covid pandemic, on the other side of the world  Australia and New Zealand are bucking the downward trend.

The countries are no stranger to major international productions — in part thanks to lucrative tax incentives — but they are currently benefitting from a production boom unlike anywhere else thanks to their governments’ swift and stringent response to the virus (in addition to geographic and demographic factors). Equally as encouraging, their distribution sectors are showing some glorious glimmers of hope that demonstrate that audiences are keen to return to theaters when it’s safe to do so.

New Zealand’s film industry boomed during the pandemic : We’re lucky that we’re isolated from the rest of the world, and I feel we’ve got a government that’s been super helpful to the film industry. We’re in the Hollywood of the Pacific, and it’s almost too easy to take for granted how lucky we are.

International blockbusters including James Cameron’s Avatar sequels, Amazon’s Lord of the Rings series and Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog – starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Kirsten Dunst – all managed complex film shoots in New Zealand this year.

Le journal du peintre

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

Le journal du peintre

Painting news project

Les tableaux du peintre

Twitter

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started