Renowned Production Designer Stuart Wurtzel to Receive a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 25th Annual Art Directors Guild Awards
ADG Awards Set For Saturday, April 10, 2021
For ticket reservations, go to www.adgawards25.com
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Stuart Wurtzel, best known for his work on
Hannah and Her Sisters and
Angels in America
, will receive the Art Directors Guild (ADG, IATSE Local 800) Lifetime Achievement Award at the 25
th Annual ADG Awards. The Awards ceremony, set for Saturday, April 10, 2021, will break with tradition in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and will be presented on a virtual platform, streaming to a worldwide and more inclusive audience. The event will honor Wurtzel s exceptional spectrum of iconic designs for film, television and theater, created over six decades. This is the first of four Lifetime Achievement Awards to be announced by the Art Directors Guild. The event is free to everyone but registration is required at www.adg
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Stuart Wurtzel to be Honored by Art Directors Guild
Greg Doherty
Stuart Wurtzel
Wurtzel, whose credits include Hannah and Her Sisters and Angeles in America, will receive a Lifetime Achievement Award.
Production designer Stuart Wurtzel best known for his work on
Hannah and Her Sisters and
Angels in America will receive the Art Directors Guild Lifetime Achievement Award during the 25th ADG Awards, which will be presented during a virtual ceremony on April 10.
Wurtzel received an Oscar nomination for his work on Woody Allen’s
Hannah and Her Sisters, following his design of Allen’s
Purple Rose of Cairo. He was the production designer on three Peter Yates films:
Michael Stanley, 1949-2021: An Appreciation of Rock s Ultimate Local Hero
Michael Stanley, 1949-2021: An Appreciation of Rock s Ultimate Local Hero
A fellow Clevelander says goodbye to a friend who stood as tall as Springsteen or Mellencamp in their hometown.
Holly Gleason, provided by
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Singer-songwriter Michael Stanley died this week of lung cancer at age 72. He’s remembered by Holly Gleason. a music critic and author who was raised in Cleveland and befriended Stanley while she was a music manager. Gleason is the author of the 2018 Belmont Book Award winner “Woman Walk the Line” and is at work on the forthcoming “Prine on Prine.”
Decoding the enduring appeal of the Power Ballad
22 December 2020
You can mock the hair. You can laugh at the overblown videos, the ludicrously self-indulgent guitar solos, the throw-the-kitchen-sink-at-it production and the shoulder pads. But when you look down the karaoke list for a song to sing, or you’ve had a tense argument near a wind tunnel, there’s only one genre of song that you want to hear, and that’s the power ballad.
Reaching peak ‘power’ during the Eighties, there was a brief period in music when artists couldn’t look rock bands in the eye until they too had an anthem of heartbreak, complete with a face-melting guitar solo, end-of-the-world drum fills and a key change or two. Sure, the late Nineties saw them fall out of fashion, pushing them to the realms of guilty pleasures, footnotes in a pop culture guidebook, but they never truly went away. Below the surface they bubbled and they postured, like great, wild-haired titans.
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