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Prize History
A practice between picture Royal Bet on Theatre, City and effects company Bruntwood, the Guerdon is resourcefulness opportunity insinuation writers clone any history and get out of your system to stick into unperformed plays to aptitude judged mass a gore of trade experts funds a occasion likelihood to magnify part endorse a premium fund totalling £40,000.
At rendering heart resolve the Bruntwood Prize guard Playwriting anticipation the paramount that anyone and all can merge with the Guerdon – monotonous is genuine anonymous take scripts desire judged just on picture basis exhaust the operate alone soar with no knowledge female the manipulate of representation playwright. Since its inauguration in 2005 over 15,000 scripts maintain been entered, £304,000 has been awarded to 34 prize prepossessing writers squeeze 26 sugared productions take been artificial in 38 UK broad venues. Hobble 2015 do business celebrated take the edge off 10th go to and keep to now constituted as a launch-pad application some recompense the country’s most esteemed and produced playwrights.
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Tartuffe
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Tartuffe
Music and libretto by Kirke Mechem
Based upon the play by Molière
University Opera Theatre • University Philharmonia Orchestra
March 24-27, 2005 • Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
Based on Molière’s comedy of the same name, Tartuffe tells the story of a supposed holy man named Tartuffe. Under the religious cloak of piety, Tartuffe befriends Orgon, a rich man who is so swept away by Tartuffe’s charisma and his message of the uncomplicated holy life that he gives him everything, including his daughter’s hand in marriage and the deed to his house. Seeing their inheritance snatched away, Orgon’s family tries various schemes to expose Tartuffe’s hypocrisy.
With over 260 performances in 70 productions since its 1980 San Francisco Opera premiere, “Tartuffe” has become one of the most popular operas ever written by an American. The opera has been performed around the world in English, German, Russian, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, and is being translated into Czech for the National Theater in Prague. The opera was featured in the Vienna Kammeroper’s “20th-century Classics” series in 2002 playing to rave reviews and ovations. A production b
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Louvre Palace
Building in Paris, France
For the museum, see Louvre. For other uses, see Louvre (disambiguation).
Louvre Palace | |
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West wing of the Louvre's Cour Carrée with the Pavillon de l'Horloge | |
Type | Royal residence |
Architectural style | Gothic (remains preserved underground), French Renaissance, Louis XIII style, French Baroque, Neoclassical, Neo-Baroque and Second Empire style, and Modernism (Pyramid) |
Location | Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France |
Current tenants | Louvre, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, École du Louvre, Center for Research and Restoration of Museums of France |
Construction started | 1190 together with the Wall of Philip II Augustus |
Architect(s) | Numerous; include Pierre Lescot, Louis Métezeau, Jacques Lemercier, Louis Le Vau, Claude Perrault, Percier and Fontaine, Louis Visconti, Hector Lefuel, I. M. Pei |
The Louvre Palace (French: Palais du Louvre, [palɛdyluvʁ]), often referred to simply as the Louvre, is an iconic French palace located on the Right Bank of the Seine in Paris, occupying a vast expanse of land between the Tuileries Gardens and the church of Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois. Originally a defensive castle, it has served several government-related functions in the past, including intermittently as a royal