Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. James David Sharman (born 12 March 1945), as Jim Sharman is an Australian director and writer for film and stage with more than 70 productions to his credit. He is renowned in Australia for his work as a theatre director from the 1960s to the present, and is best known internationally as the director of the 1973 theatrical hit The Rocky Horror Show, its film adaptation The Rocky Horror Picture ...

  2. It’s summed up in a quote from poet Paul Eluard – “There is another world, but it is in this one”. Q: You moved to London to direct Jesus Christ Superstar in the West End. During that time you fell in and directed at the Royal Court. I loved the Court. It opened the door to a world beyond musicals.

  3. View Jim Sharman’s profile on LinkedIn, the world’s largest professional community. Jim has 8 jobs listed on their profile. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Jim’s ...

  4. Blood & Tinsel is a remarkable story about Australia. It is also a moving tribute to a family legendary in the entertainment stakes. “Entertaining, informative and provocative … a memoir, a cultural history and a moving self-portrait …. ‘Sharman, Shaman, Showman’ could be applied to Sharman the writer as well as the theatre maker.”.

  5. James "Jim" Sharman is a director and writer for film and stage with over 70 productions to his credit. He is renowned in Australia for his work as a theatre director from the 1960s to the present, but is probably best known internationally as the director of the 1973 theatrical hit The Rocky Horror Show, its film adaptation The Rocky Horror Picture Show and the film's follow-up Shock Treatment.

  6. Aug 5 2008. To coincide with the release of Rocky Horror Picture Show and Shock Treatment director Jim Sharman's new memoir, Blood & Tinsel, the RHPS Official Fan Club was granted permission to ask a few questions submitted by you, the fans. For more information on the director and the memoir, visit www.bloodandtinsel.com .

  7. And so Jim Sharman, after seven years directing blockbuster musicals around the world, comes back to Australia to reconnect with his roots. He turns down invitations to direct Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Evita in London and instead takes up with novelist and nobel laureate Patrick White, another Australian prodigal son returned from Europe.Sharman’s return journey recalls White’s own, though ...