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Mitchell received the Tony Award for Best Original Score; she was also nominated for Best Book of a Musical. The Broadway cast album of the show took home the Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album in 2020. Mitchell's first book, Working on a Song: The Lyrics of Hadestown, was published by Plume Books on October 6, 2020.
List of actors who have played Mycroft Holmes; List of actors who have played Sherlock Holmes; List of actors who have played Inspector Lestrade; List of actors who have played Professor Moriarty; List of actors who have played Elvis Presley; List of actors who have played Dr. Watson; List of actors who played President of the United States
Down (re-titled The Shaft on US releases) is a 2001 science fiction horror film written and directed by Dick Maas and starring James Marshall, Naomi Watts, and Eric Thal. It is a remake of the 1983 Dutch-language film De Lift , which was also directed by Maas.
Hadestown is a musical with music, lyrics, and book by Anaïs Mitchell.It tells a version of the ancient Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice. Eurydice, a young girl looking for something to eat, goes to work in a hellish industrial version of the Greek underworld to escape poverty and the cold, and her poor singer-songwriter lover Orpheus comes to rescue her.
This film-related list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. ( September 2013 ) Action film actors appear in action movies , a film genre in which one or more heroes are thrust into a series of challenges that typically include physical feats, extended fight scenes, violence , and frantic chases.
Coming Down may refer to: "Coming Down" (Richard Fleeshman song) "Coming Down" (Five Finger Death Punch song) "Coming Down", a 2011 song by the Weeknd from the mixtape House of Balloons; Coming Down, an album by Daniel Ash "Coming Down", a 2015 song by Halsey from the album Badlands
Coming Down the Mountain is a 2007 British television film which was shown on BBC One, written by Mark Haddon (author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time) and directed by Julie Anne Robinson. The television film was based on a radio play also written by Haddon.
Writing that the script was a mess, Tallerico said "Down" fell into the outdated “sexually active characters suffer” model of the genre. [8] In a more favorable three-star review at The Daily Dot, Eddie Strait called the episode "a fleet, economical film" whose sense of humor about itself kept it from descending into cliché. [9]