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Dezső Antalffy Zsiross Max Reger Karl Straube Bossi Franz Liszt Franz Liszt Academy Music Radio City Music Hall New York Philharmonic Orchestra 1880 1885 1926 1945
Dezső d'Antalffy-Zsiross: Tone Poem After Arnold Böcklin's Picture: "Toteninsel" ("The Island Of The Dead"): (http•••) Xaver Varnus plays the great organ of the Palace of Arts in Budapest. Recorded live. Dezso d'Antalffy-Zsiross (July 24, 1885, Nagybecskerek, Hungary (now Serbia) - April 29, 1945, Denville, USA) was the greatest Hungarian organist, studied with, among others Max Reger, Karl Straube and Enrico Bossi. In Budapest, besides being the resident organist of the Saint Stephen's Basilica, Dezső d'Antalffy-Zsiross also taught organ at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He moved to the USA in 1926 where he worked as the theater organist of Radio City Music Hall in Rockefeller Center, and as the organist of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. facebook.com/xavervarnus
André Rieu Johann Strauss Orchestra Radio City Music Hall 2013
André Rieu & the Johann Strauss Orchestra performing "The music of the Night" Live in Radio City Music Hall, New York City. For concert dates visit: (http•••) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Subscribe to André Rieu's YouTube channel at: (http•••) Or follow André Rieu at: (http•••) (http•••) (http•••) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2013 / André Rieu Productions | www.andrerieu.com
Kerr Nichols Curry Butz Putnam Woolf Cherry Byrne Irwin Turner Louise Parker Foster Richardson Slater Radio City Music Hall
(11 May 2005) SHOTLIST 1. Lynn Redgrave announces nominations for best musical 2. Excerpt: 'Monty Python's Spamalot' 3. Nomination for best play announced 4. Exterior Walter Kerr Theatre 5. Excerpt: 'Doubt' 6. Alan Cumming announces nominations for best direction in a musical 'SPAMALOT' EARNS 14 TONY NOMINATIONS "Monty Python's Spamalot," an offbeat musical spoof inspired by those quirky British cutups and their film "Monty Python and the Holy Grail," grabbed 14 Tony Award nominations Tuesday, including a nod for best musical. The 14 nominations for "Spamalot" included nods for director Mike Nichols as well as for the show's King Arthur, Tim Curry, and its Lancelot, Hank Azaria. The two actors will go up against Gary Beach, the warmhearted drag star of "La Cage aux Folles," and those two con men from "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels" - Norbert Leo Butz and John Lithgow. "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels," about a couple of scam artists working the French Riviera, and "The Light in The Piazza," a complex, lushly romantic tale of love at first sight, each earned 11 nominations. All three will compete for the musical prize, along with "The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee," a small, sweet show about youngsters learning how to win - and lose. "Doubt," Pulitzer Prize winner for drama, and the revival of Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" each scored something of an acting coup. The entire, four-person casts of both plays received nominations. "Doubt," John Patrick Shanley's parable about the innocence - or guilt - of a likable parish priest, gathered nominations for Cherry Jones as a dour, suspicious nun, Brian F. O'Byrne as the accused priest and Heather Goldenhersh and Adriane Lenox, the production's two supporting players. Competing against "Doubt" in the best-play category are "Democracy," Michael Frayn's spy story set in Germany; August Wilson's mystical "Gem of the Ocean"; and "The Pillowman," Martin McDonagh's ghoulish tale of murder and mayhem. Bill Irwin and Kathleen Turner picked up acting nominations for their performances in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Turner and Cherry Jones ("Doubt") face competition from actresses who appeared in plays that have already closed: Laura Linney, the spurned woman in "Sight Unseen"; Mary-Louise Parker, a distraught housewife in "Reckless"; and Phylicia Rashad, an ancient, iconic figure in "Gem of the Ocean." The competition for Irwin and O'Byrne ("Doubt") will be Billy Crudup, a jailed writer in "The Pillowman"; Philip Bosco, a disbelieving juror in "twelve Angry Men"; and James Earl Jones, the cantankerous father of "On Golden Pond." Nominated for leading actress in a musical were Christina Applegate, "Sweet Charity"; Victoria Clark, "The Light in the Piazza"; Erin Dilly, "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang"; Sutton Foster, "Little Women"; and Sherie Rene Scott, "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels." It was a year in which several big names were left out of the highly competitive acting categories. Among those snubbed by the Tony nominators were Denzel Washington, who plays Brutus in a revival of "Julius Caesar" and the leads in two Tenneesee Williams revivals: Natasha Richardson and John C. Reilly in "A Streetcar Named Desire" and Jessica Lange and Christian Slater in "The Glass Menagerie." The shows received mixed notices from critics, as did the stars. The Tony Awards, with Hugh Jackman as host, will take place June 5 at Radio City Music Hall with a three-hour telecast by CBS. The nominations in 25 categories will be voted on by 758 members of the theatrical community. Find out more about AP Archive: (http•••) Twitter: (http•••) Facebook: (http•••) Instagram: (http•••) You can license this story through AP Archive: (http•••)
Grace Moore Moore Gustave Charpentier Charpentier Radio City Music Hall 1937
"Depuis Le Jour" from Gustave Charpentier's "Louise." Sung by Grace Moore with the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra conducted by Ernö Rapeé. Recorded for a 1937 radio broadcast in New York's Radio City Music Hall.
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- Karte: Konzerthallen - Nordamerika
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