It’s always extra frustrating when a biopic falls short, especially if its subject is as compelling as the relationship between two brilliant iconoclasts like Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West.
Fifty years ago this week, the world got its first stunned, plastered look at the film version of Edward Albee's Tony Award-winning 1962 play, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Depicting one long, cruel ...
A star known for her stellar beauty hides it under a wig, unflattering makeup and 30 extra pounds. A fiery actor signs on to play a milquetoast, broken man. A first-time director strips away the work ...
One reason that the great Virginia Woolf has proven resistant to the flattening instincts of the straight-ahead, birth-to-death biopic to date is that there are so many ways into the story of her life ...
Eva Green and Gemma Arterton are set to star in Chanya Button’s “Vita & Virginia,” which Protagonist Pictures will launch to buyers at Berlin’s European Film Market this week. The movie tracks the ...
BERLIN Feb 19 (Reuters) - Philosopher Paul B. Preciado did not want to make a film about his own gender transition, because British novelist Virginia Woolf had already done so a century before.
No one's afraid of Virginia Woolf anymore. Now that Nicole Kidman has played her in "The Hours" -- a performance for which she won the Golden Globe (and not by her prosthetic nose) -- this highbrow ...
Where are all my Bloomsbury Group(ies)? A film chronicling the romance between Virginia Woolf—novelist, essayist, and foundational feminist thinker—and fellow author Vita Sackville-West is in the ...
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