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Jarman's and film
In Derek Jarman's 1991 film based on Marlowe's play, Isabella is played by actress Tilda Swinton as a ' femme fatale ' whose thwarted love for Edward causes her to turn against him and steal his throne.
* In the last sequence of Derek Jarman's The Tempest ( 1979 ), a film adaptation of William Shakespeare's play, the singer / actress Elisabeth Welch, appearing as ' a goddess ', sings the song ; which she had taken as her signature tune since 1933.
Paul Wittgenstein appears as a character in Derek Jarman's 1993 film Wittgenstein, about his brother Ludwig Wittgenstein.
In Derek Jarman's 1991 film, based on Marlow's play, Edward and Gaveston are presented as victims of homophobia and prejudice.
* Heathcote Williams played Prospero in Derek Jarman's 1979 film version of The Tempest.
She is portrayed by Tilda Swinton in Derek Jarman's film Wittgenstein and by Penelope Wilton in Christopher Hampton's film Carrington.
* Appearance as a priest in Derek Jarman's 1986 film Caravaggio
The film was his last testament as a film-maker, and consists of a single shot of saturated blue colour filling the screen, as background to a soundtrack where Jarman's and some of his favourite actors ' narration describes his life and vision.
* Text of Jarman's soundtrack for the film Blue
Funded by the BFI and produced by film theorist Colin MacCabe, Caravaggio became Jarman's most famous film, and marked the beginning of a new phase in Jarman's filmmaking career: from now on all his films would be partly funded by television companies, often receiving their most prominent exhibition in TV screenings.
In 1989, Jarman's film War Requiem brought the legendary actor Laurence Olivier out of retirement.
His final testament as a film-maker was the film Glitterbug made for the Arena slot on BBC Two, and broadcast shortly after Jarman's death.
Other notable published works include film scripts ( Up in the Air, Blue, War Requiem, Caravaggio, Queer Edward II and Wittgenstein: The Terry Eagleton Script / The Derek Jarman Film ), a study of his garden at Dungeness Derek Jarman's Garden, and At Your Own Risk, a defiant celebration of gay sexuality.
* Delphinium: A Childhood Portrait of Derek Jarman ( 2009 ): a " stylized and lyrical coming-of-age " short film combining narrative and documentary elements directed by Matthew Mishory depicting Jarman's " artistic, sexual, and political awakening in postwar England ".
A notable departure from the industrial form of the label was the blues standard " Stormy Weather " sung by Elisabeth Welch, taken from the soundtrack of Derek Jarman's film The Tempest.
He appeared in his first film in 1986 when he played Ranuccio Tomassoni in Derek Jarman's film Caravaggio.
Kent also had bad relations with the early punk incarnation of Adam & the Ants, starting with his NME review of the soundtrack album to Derek Jarman's film Jubilee in which Kent labelled Adam Ant a Nazi sympathiser on account of the featured song " Deutscher Girls ".
She appeared in Derek Jarman's film Jubilee ( 1977 ) and The Great Rock ' n ' Roll Swindle, by Julien Temple ( 1980 ).
Caravaggio was Jarman's first project with Tilda Swinton and was also her first film role.

Jarman's and which
Jarman's solo recording career began at this time with two releases on the Delmark Label which included non-conforming recording methods, such as spoken word and " little instruments ", the latter a technique that Jarman and Mitchell would use to effectiveness in the Art Ensemble.
Lacking almost any dialogue the film is shown as Jarman's own subjective musings, which are tempered by the reality of his own mortality — when HIV-positive Jarman made the film he was facing death from AIDS.

Jarman's and had
Although it had been funding British experimental films as early as 1952, the British Film Institute's foundation of a production board in 1964 — and a substantial increase in public funding from 1971 onwards — enabled it to become a dominant force in developing British art cinema in the 1970s and 80s: from the first of Bill Douglas's Trilogy My Childhood ( 1972 ), and of Terence Davies ' Trilogy Childhood ( 1978 ), via Peter Greenaway's earliest films ( including the surprising commercial success of The Draughtsman's Contract ( 1982 )) and Derek Jarman's championing of the New Queer Cinema.
It was a later complaint of Jarman's that with the disappearance of the Independent Film sector it had become impossible for him to get finance.
Davidson, who had no acting experience, was discovered by a casting associate at a wrap party for Derek Jarman's Edward II.

Jarman's and at
A broken jaw to Grout led to Jarman's eventual return to Test cricket, against England at Brisbane for the First Test of the 1962-63 Ashes series.

Jarman's and Film
Derek Jarman's ' Jubilee ' revisited Bright Lights Film Journal, Issue 30, October 2000

Jarman's and UK
The release of Derek Jarman's Jubilee ( 1978 ) marked the beginning of a successful period of UK art cinema, continuing into the 1980s with film-makers like Sally Potter.

Jarman's and .
Jarman's version, played by Welsh guitarist Tich Gwilym is one of the most famous modern versions of the song.
On 23 July 2007 British distributor Artificial Eye released DVD tying Blue together with Glitterbug, a collage of Jarman's Super 8 footage.
The murder of a wealthy clothier, Olde Cole or Thomas of Reading, proved to be Jarman's undoing in that they failed to get rid of Cole's horse, leading to their confessing.
Jarman's first films were experimental super 8 mm shorts, a form he never entirely abandoned, and later developed further in his films Imagining October ( 1984 ), The Angelic Conversation ( 1985 ), The Last of England ( 1987 ) and The Garden ( 1990 ) as a parallel to his narrative work.
This was followed by Jarman's unconventional adaptation of Shakespeare's The Tempest in 1979.
The conclusion of Caravaggio also marked the beginning of a temporary abandonment of traditional narrative in Jarman's films.
Jarman's work broke new ground in creating and expanding the fledgling form of ' the pop video ' in England, and in gay rights activism.
Jarman's early Super-8 mm work has been included on some of the DVD releases of his films.
* Derek Jarman: Life As Art ( 2004 ): a biography exploring Derek Jarman's life and films by 400Blows Productions / Andy Kimpton-Nye, featuring Tilda Swinton, Simon Fisher Turner, Chris Hobbs and narrated by John Quentin.

surviving and Keith
The Dilley sextuplets ( born May 25, 1993 ) are the United States ' first set of surviving sextuplets, born to Becki and Keith Dilley in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.

surviving and Collins
Herbert sent Baralongs twelve Royal Marines, under the command of a Corporal Collins, to find the surviving German sailors aboard Nicosian.
Almost all the station's talk show presenters were axed at the time, including The Big Boys Breakfast with David Banks and Nick Ferrari, with only Whale, Collins, and Mike Dickin surviving.
In 2010, surviving members of the Funk Brothers accompanied Phil Collins on his Motown covers album Going Back and appear in the live Going Back concert DVD.
Collins remained an important manufacturer of AM and FM broadcast radio transmitters for the commercial market surviving the drastic cost cutting market of the 1960s and 1970s.
A member of the circle of friends that included Dickens and Wilkie Collins, Egg features in their surviving correspondence.
Hi design throughput increased at the turn of the decade and among his subsequent projects included surviving buildings such as the Empire Works ( later Bryant and May factory ) ( 1909 ) in inner suburban Richmond, the Victorian Racing Club ( 1910 ) on Collins Street ( demolished ), Wellington Opera House ( 1911 ) and Sir Charles Hotham Hotel ( 1912 ), which survives on the corner of Spencer and Flinders Streets as a backpacker hostel.
The 1980s appeared to bring great promise for most of the surviving band members, as a new group, the Rossington-Collins Band, formed, consisting of Wilkeson, guitarists Gary Rossington and Allen Collins, and keyboardist Billy Powell.

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