The Real Housewives of Miami - (Aug 22nd)
Betty la Fea, the Story Continues - (Aug 22nd)
My Strange Arrest - (Aug 22nd)
Lost Treasures of Egypt - (Aug 22nd)
Love After Lockup - (Aug 22nd)
Family Recipe Showdown - (Aug 22nd)
Jersey Shore- Family Vacation - (Aug 22nd)
Necaxa - (Aug 22nd)
Project Runway - (Aug 22nd)
Long Story Short - (Aug 22nd)
Ragel We Set Setat - (Aug 22nd)
Homicide Squad New Orleans - (Aug 22nd)
Beyond the Gates - (Aug 22nd)
TNA iMPACT - (Aug 22nd)
Magic City- An American Fantasy - (Aug 22nd)
Alone - (Aug 22nd)
Homes Under the Hammer - (Aug 22nd)
Bangers and Cash - (Aug 22nd)
The Beechgrove Garden - (Aug 22nd)
The Fortune Hotel - (Aug 22nd)
A young black artist leaves his Los Angeles digs and travels to Europe to find himself. A theatrical stage production of the original Broadway musical.
Five young Ukrainians discuss life following the Maidan Revolution of 2014. Not all fought in the Russian-Ukrainian war, but it, regardless, shattered their life plans. Representing 'Generation Maidan', they face the question of how to cope with experiences of violence, how to go on. A local theatre director produces Hamlet, wherein they can use Shakespeare’s tragic character as a mirror and face their traumas onstage. For them, 'to be or not to be' is not simply text but an existential dilemma with no clear answer.
A mockumentary examination of Shakespeare's greatest tragedy using "breaking news" style interviews and commentary.
The story behind the translation and performance of Shakespeare's "Hamlet" in Klingon.
On 18th of December 2017, the Filarmonica Teatro Regio Torino, directed by Timothy Brock, presented "The Gold Rush" by Charles Chaplin, with live performance of the soundtrack. But let's go back a few days: this short film takes us in the backstage of the concert!
In their songs, comedy and exuberant music, a travelling theatre company give a fiercely polemic account of Scottish history, from the aftermath of Culloden to the oil boom. Their production before a live audience is intercut with filmed reconstructions of the Highland Clearances and the Victorian obsession with hunting stags.
In the dressing room of the French cinema, minutes before attending a lecture, François Truffaut recalls his trajectory
An acting ensemble rehearses for an upcoming theater festival. They rig up stage scenery and practice dialogue and set pieces in the middle of a residential area. But this is no ordinary theater setting, as evidenced by the armed guards at the entrance. Festival 4 Chemins is taking place in Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti. Gangs are active in the city; you can hear machine-gun fire in the distance.
The internal journey of eight men, who, through a theater workshop, go through the different prisons they inhabit. Practicing the art of seeing themselves, in Boal's words, this group of men reflects on their masculinity as a representation to hide their true strength: their vulnerability.
The English language is spoken by 450 million people around the globe, with a further one billion using it as a second language. It is arguably Britain’s most famous export. The man often given credit for the global triumph of English, and the invention of many of our modern words, is William Shakespeare. Shakespeare’s plays first hit the stage four centuries ago, as the explorers of Elizabethan England were laying the foundations for the British empire. It was this empire that would carry English around the world. Language historian and BBC New Generation Thinker Dr John Gallagher asks whether the real story of how English became a global linguistic superpower is more complex.