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John Frankenheimer Interview 1975 Brian Linehan's City Lights

In this interview from 1975, director John Frankenheimer talks about his film career: his newest film French Connection II with Gene Hackman, the 1973 film The Iceman Cometh with actor Frederic March, his first film The Young Stranger, his 1969 film The Extraordinary Seaman which he calls a "lousy movie" he made "to pay for a divorce," filming in Mexico, the 1964 film The Train with Burt Lancaster, the 1962 film Birdman of Alcatraz and the 1964 film Seven Days In May with Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner.

Other topics include Hollywood film crews, Warren Beatty, the importance of peer recognition in Hollywood, the role of agents in Hollywood, Eva Maire Saint, the American Film Institute, young people getting degrees in film and the Director's Guild apprentice program.

From 1974 to 2000, Canada’s Brian Linehan conducted thousands of in-depth interviews with the greatest actors and directors from over 60 years of film history. His programs City Lights and Linehan have not been seen since they first aired and are now available for the first time for licensing. Linehan, a stylishly gifted broadcaster, meticulously did all his own research and that, coupled with his knowledge and passion about film and filmmaking, puts him in a class all by himself.

With 20,000 hours of music footage spanning 90 years and thousands of hours of in-depth interviews with the 20th century’s icons of Film and Television, Politics, Comedy, Literature, Art, Science, Fashion and Sports, Reelin’ In The Years Productions is now the World’s Premier Source For Footage Of Musical Artists, Entertainers & History Makers.
http://reelinintheyears.com

Note: these clips are available on YouTube for producers, directors, researchers and clearance companies for potential use in their projects. Our website on the screen is to protect the footage from being used without our consent and so industry professionals can find us to properly license the footage.

Brian Linehan, who passed away in 2004, left his entire estate to The Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation to provide training, work opportunities and promotion for young actors of exceptional talent. All of the income of his Foundation is donated to not-for-profit institutions for that purpose. In the decade since his death, recipients of the Foundation’s support have included extraordinary young actors affiliated with the Canadian Film Centre, The National Screen Institute of Canada, the Stratford Shakespearean Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival, which, since Brian's passing, has preserved and housed Brian's personal archive and tape library.

Видео John Frankenheimer Interview 1975 Brian Linehan's City Lights канала Brian Linehan's City Lights
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18 июня 2016 г. 4:31:22
00:21:31
Яндекс.Метрика