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Big is a 1988 American fantasy comedy-drama film directed by Penny Marshall and stars Tom Hanks as Josh Baskin, an adolescent boy whose wish to be "big" transforms him physically into an adult. The film also stars Elizabeth Perkins , David Moscow , John Heard , and Robert Loggia , and was written by Gary Ross and Anne Spielberg .
Big The Musical is a 1996 musical adaptation of the 1988 film starring Tom Hanks.It was directed by Mike Ockrent and featured music by David Shire and lyrics by Richard Maltby, Jr., with choreography by Susan Stroman.
In the 1980s, Saraceni invented the Walking Piano, an oversized synthesizer. His invention was used in the 1988 film Big, where actors Tom Hanks and Robert Loggia danced on the piano in a scene of the film. [1] [5] [6] Saraceni died of heart failure in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, on 3 June 2024, at the age of 89. [1] [7] [8] [9]
That Thing You Do! is a 1996 American musical comedy-drama film written and directed by Tom Hanks, in his feature writing and directorial debut.Set in 1960s rock and roll culture, it chronicles the rise and fall of a fictional one-hit wonder pop band and stars Tom Everett Scott in his film debut along with Johnathon Schaech, Steve Zahn, and Ethan Embry as the band's members, with Liv Tyler and ...
The Big Combo is a 1955 American crime film noir directed by Joseph H. Lewis, written by Philip Yordan and photographed by cinematographer John Alton, with music by David Raksin. [3] The film stars Cornel Wilde , Richard Conte and Brian Donlevy , as well as Jean Wallace , who was Wilde's wife at the time.
Richard Gere is shedding light on one of the steamiest scenes in Pretty Woman.. Gere opened up about the romantic classic during the Nov. 20 episode of the Today show. Host Savannah Guthrie ...
The music has been re-recorded numerous times by different artists, and became the basis of Nyman's 1994 composition, The Piano Concerto which debuted in 1994. Perhaps the most unusual rerecording is by conductor Bill Broughton and the Orchestra of the Americas—an orchestral version sans piano. "Here to There", a saxophone solo, has become ...
[11] Music critic Jonathan Broxton wrote "The Creator is a really, really good score, which successfully blends some of Zimmer’s more modern science fiction sensibilities with the evocative Asian sound of scores like Beyond Rangoon, and builds up to a powerful, emotional finale that really stirs the soul."