View allAll Photos Tagged ThePlayer
The Players watch as Hermia and Lysander, the man she loves, flee into the forest to escape from Hermia's father who is making plans for her to marry another man.
Inspired by A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare
Created for the Kreative People Group Contest People
All photos used are my own.
Thank you for taking the time to visit, comment, fave or invite. I really appreciate them all.
All rights reserved. This photo is not authorized for use on your blogs, pin boards, websites or use in any other way. You may NOT download this image without written permission from lemon~art.
CEBO Backdrops - Halloween October Photo Contest!
∻⊰ 🌷 ⊱∻
I’m thrilled to participate as a Designer in the new hottest event in Second Life as well as an Official Blogger for Heathens Court. There’s so much variety here my skull is spinning! The sim décor is superb for a spooky visit and photo session! Lots and lots of great Creators are participating adding Halloween Exclusives for your darkest desires! Grab that witch broom and fly on over!
Heathens Court Event
October 5th through 31st, 2019
I love “The Players” skeletons playing poker at the table set up by The Pumpkin Head! This display of... Style Card & Info Here!
"But man is a fickle and disreputable creature and perhaps, like a chess-player, is interested in the process of attaining his goal rather than the goal itself."
a focused chess player at Bryant Park, New York.
My Christmas Present.
A Nixon Player.
Photodiox Macro Extension Tube
Canon t2i
50mm f/1.8 on the tube
Strobist: Canon 430 exii bounce off the ceiling behind camera.
After Manda's secret meeting with Porter Boon had decided to make some plans of his own. If Porter only had some eyes in the back of his head....
Info: snooted strobe to the hippo cam left, amber gelled strobe low cam right for ambient room light, red gelled strobe outside behind Boon for the silhouette. Straight from the camera with no photoshop. The "eye" was drawn with LEDs.
Off work with a chest infection at the moment so not taking any new pictures so heres one we took from the other nights photoshoot.
I took advantage of the situation by trying a couple of different things.
For this shot I turned the car around so the headlights faced the camera and acted as a backlight.
I asked my son to stand in front of the car and hold the baseball bat across his shouders.
I placed the 2x Jessops 360 AFD's which where still on the lightstands either side of the car and pointing towards my son.
I placed my Nikon SB600 on the passenger seat of the car facing upwards, the SB600 still had on the green gels from the previous shots we had done.
I didn't change the settings of the flashguns but adjusted the settings in camera to suit the scene by taking test shots.
The 2x Jessops 360 AFD's either side of the car were set to 1/4 power.
The Nikon SB600 inside the car was set to 1/8 power and had 2x Lee green gels attached using velcro.
All 3 flashguns where fired using my Yongnuo RF-602 trigger + recievers.
Post processing I cooled the colour temperature giving this lovely blueish feel which added to the sinister feel of the shot.
Have to say again all the comments you have been leaving have been witty and funny and make doing these shots so worth while so Thankyou.
Taken With
►Nikon D300s
►Sigma 10-20@10mm
►Tripod + Cable Release
►2 x Jessops 360 AFD's
►1 x Nikon SB600 + Lee Green Gels
►Yongnuo RF-602 trigger + recievers
Press 'L' on your keyboard to view on black.
Check out my blog
www.simonanderson-photography.blogspot.co.uk
Follow me on twitter
Outfit for :
@gentlewoman_magazine
@mutamenti_vintage_store
Photo : @cgp_photo_agency @cg_photojournalist
Consulente outfit : @__.amala.___
Cravatta e accessori : @salone_sartoriale
Newspaper : @theplayers_magazine
#outfitoftheday #outfitwoman #outfitman #gentleman #gentlewoman #good #girl #likeforlikes #like4likes #likeforlikeback #followforfollowback #followme #followpost #share #day
Outfit for :
@gentlewoman_magazine
@mutamenti_vintage_store
Photo : @cgp_photo_agency @cg_photojournalist
Consulente outfit : @__.amala.___
Cravatta e accessori : @salone_sartoriale
Newspaper : @theplayers_magazine
#outfitoftheday #outfitwoman #outfitman #gentleman #gentlewoman #good #girl #likeforlikes #like4likes #likeforlikeback #followforfollowback #followme #followpost #share #day
Porter meets with an unidentified person to discuss some plans for Boon. By the looks of it Porter has spelled out quite the plan.
Info: SB-25 snooted to the hippo and 1 SB-25 to the out-of-frame panda with handcuffs for the shadow. triggered by cybersyncs. Straight from the camera no photoshop.
Outfit for :
@gentlewoman_magazine
@mutamenti_vintage_store
Photo : @cgp_photo_agency @cg_photojournalist
Consulente outfit : @__.amala.___
Cravatta e accessori : @salone_sartoriale
Newspaper : @theplayers_magazine
#outfitoftheday #outfitwoman #outfitman #gentleman #gentlewoman #good #girl #likeforlikes #like4likes #likeforlikeback #followforfollowback #followme #followpost #share #day
Outfit for :
@gentlewoman_magazine
@mutamenti_vintage_store
Photo : @cgp_photo_agency @cg_photojournalist
Consulente outfit : @__.amala.___
Cravatta e accessori : @salone_sartoriale
Newspaper : @theplayers_magazine
#outfitoftheday #outfitwoman #outfitman #gentleman #gentlewoman #good #girl #likeforlikes #like4likes #likeforlikeback #followforfollowback #followme #followpost #share #day
Boon revels in his own evilness...decluttr
We learned from this, that yes, these masks are flammable....
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
The Players ~ Renaissance Musicians
Celtic Folk Music ~ Good Knight Stage
Ty Billings (Guitar) - Jack Stamates (Fiddle)
25th Annual Florida Renaissance Festival
March 2017 ~ Deerfield Beach, Florida U.S.A.
Celtic Mayhem - Combining the talents of members of three of the renaissance faire circuit's most popular musical acts, Celtic Mayhem has been entertaining audiences with their unique, raucous brand of Celtic folk music since their debut in the Spring of 2007. Featuring
Ty Billings on vocals, guitar, and flute, Martyn Wylde on vocals, bass, guitar, and bouzouki and Jack Stamates on vocals, fiddle, recorder, and percussion....they are the signature band of the Florida festival.
(five more photos of 'Ty in action' in the comments)
***************************************************************************************
This is my eleventh year covering this fun festival filled with color and pageantry and beautiful people. Each year some of the regulars return and sometimes fresh new faces appear to join the renaissance family. Some are vendors or employees, and some customers dress up to fit in with the renaissance festival fun and its 16th century way of life. One big happy family of a few thousand escaping the dull-drums of their daily life for a few hours. This year's crop of new faces was lovely. Hope you enjoy the images. I try to capture their joy. Always fun, festive and very colorful. Thanks very much for looking. Hazaaa!!
www.ren-fest.com/deerfield-home.asp
www.facebook.com/flarenfest?ref=ts
Florida Renaissance Festival 2017 - Festival Overviews:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gRRTINyamw
www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBB8hSvt3sE
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-rc1VzDLxw#t=113.349 (Parade)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVEY7ti5vdo (Day's End Pub Sing)
Florida Renaissance Festival 2017 - Day's Final Joust:
Meet Boon. He is one bad 'boon. He is hell bent on wreaking havoc and disrupting general peace and safety. The only one with the ability to stop this fool is Manda.
info: 1 strobe on the floor cam left and right. 1 more behind subject pointing away. Triggered by cybersyncs.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
This guy was just sitting outside of a cinema, looking at the people walking by, assessing them, analysing them, mostly the ladies. I just loved his style. As soon as I spotted him I thought that I must take his picture, so I walked up to him and asked if it would be cool to photograph him. He asked me what do I want to do that for, so I just answered "I really like your style"! He smiled and said ok. That was it. Snap!
If you want to see how I took the photo, you can view the relevant clip on the official Street Hunters YouTube Channel at youtu.be/rJzN1kzyEjM?t=9m2s. Also, if you haven’t seen my previous Street Hunts, please visit the relevant Playlist at www.youtube.com/watch?v=ed28QCd4QRw&list=PLKhqhm3_KUy.... Thank you.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
Girls in the bar. Jacksonville Landing. THE PLAYERS live on the Courtyard. Nikon D60 + Nikkor H 180mm f2.8. Manual.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
The Fly - Alternative Movie Poster
Original illustration - posters, prints and many other products available at:
This is the secret mountain temple that is home to the evil Boon, AKA Bad Boon. He meditates for hours with thoughts of terror keeping him at peace. He plots and schemes here with only one victim in mind, Manda. Unfortunately Manda is as naive as he is heroic....
Info* SOOC. multiple red gels to the BG and foreground painted by hand with a torch. On a side note, Phill was a trooper and offered to take his shoes and socks off in minus degree weather for the shot....
Maimouna Youssef
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
The Player, designed by George Lundeen, was unveiled at the main entrance of Coors Field on June 2, 2005. The Rotary Club of Denver donated the 9-foot, 6-inch tall statue, which sits atop a four-foot granite base. It is the same figure that it awards, on a smaller scale, to the recipient of the Branch Rickey Award, which honors the Major League player who best exemplifies the Rotary's motto of "service over self." The Denver club has been honoring Branch Rickey Award winners since 1991.
Coors Field, located at 2001 Blake Street, opened on April 26, 1995 as the home field of Major League Baseball's Colorado Rockies. The expansion Rockies had plaid their two previous seasons at Mile High Stadium before moving into the LoDo ballpark designed by HOK Sport and named for the Coors Brewing Company of Golden, Colorado. The 76-acre stadium treats fans sitting in the first-base and right-field areas to a spectacular view of the Rocky Mountains.
The Player, bronze statue by George Lundeen at the entrance to Coors Field, home of the Colorado Rockies baseball team, Denver, Colorado.
The Rotary Club of Denver donated the 9-foot, 6-inch tall statue, atop a four-foot granite base, entitled "The Player." It's the same figure that it awarded, in a much smaller size, to the recipient of the Branch Rickey Award, which honors the Major League player who best exemplifies the Rotary's motto of "service over self."
Branch Rickey invented baseball's modern farm system and helped lay the groundwork for modern scouting and statistical analysis. But he is known best for signing Jackie Robinson for the Brooklyn Dodgers, an action that helped bring down the color barrier in the Major Leagues. (Source: Colorado Rockies)
"THE MOST ORIGINAL VISION FOR A SERIES I'VE EVER SEEN."
`--Wyatt Matturs
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LOGLINE: NOT Your Father's 'First Contact'!
THEY LANDED ON SCREEN...
In Our Consciousness...Through A Cave Mural
AN IMPOSSIBLE SCENE
From Human History
Would Prove Their Means
To A Protean End...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
POV: FIRST CONTACT, Bold-Stroked...
SO: you're in a theater, 40 minutes into, say, a 'romantic comedy'...
SUDDENLY: PALEOLITHIC cave painters appear on screen @ work on the most breathtaking mural ever seen...no explanation...an ineffable gravitas, a virtually palpable sense of history alive, including even (widely reported) the scent of smoke and human sweat...
FOR 12 INEXPLICABLE MINUTES...speaking in a language never heard by modern humanity, one artist even apparently making a joke that elicits loud collective laughter echoing through invisible chambers of an unknown cave (the location soon after discovered, further removing the prospect of a grand hoax & emphasizing a non-human intelligence behind it)
...SOME of the (unknowingly global) audience is intrigued and even mesmerized, others, after a minute or two, irritated, descend across time-zones (but mostly PST, West Coast U.S) to multiplex lobbies to complain, demand an explanation, what'-s-this-TRAILER doing interrupting what-I-Paid-To-SEE, etc...
WELL who knew? it's FIRST CONTACT...but nothing follows for weeks...as the world rocks in the vast roll of a wholly unforeseen Sea Change...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HUMANITY'S FIRST COLLECTIVE OUT-OF-BODY EXPERIENCE?
FOR THE RECORD:
"...THE WORLD WILL BE BESIDE ITSELF--
THERE WILL BE FEAR...SHOCK...MYSTERY...AWE...REVERENCE...HILARITY...
NEW RELIGIOUS DIVIDES, THRILLING SOLIDARITY, ASTONISHING 'FAULT-LINES' THROUGH EVERY ESTABLISHED POWER-BASE,
ROBUST & UNPREDICTABLE SOCIAL UPHEAVAL
ACROSS THE GLOBE.
MEANWHILE, INCREASINGLY 'FORWARD-LEANING' 'COMPETITION' AMONG HOLLYWOOD'S MOST ILLUSTRIOUS "CANDIDATES" FOR "DIRECTOR'S CUT"
WILL REDEFINE OLD FRIENDSHIPS & RIVALRIES...
AND YES, HOW COULD IT BE OTHERWISE?--
THERE WILL BE DINOSAURS..."
--Wyatt Matturs
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FUN FACT: ALIEN ANONYMOUS--PITCH & ROLL--A SEMI-GRAPHIC NOVELLA Produced In A Reality That Includes {WAIT-For-it} ..."ETERNITY!"
--Random-Sequence Episode 'Flashcards' In The Downscroll
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hubble Telescope Meets Hollywood Navel Gaze--InnieOutie Oscillation Seen To Possibly Threaten "Known" Universe: bit.ly/12RF2Tl
FACEBOOK PAGED @ PARALLEL UNIVERSAL PRESENTS ALIEN ANONYMOUS Movie.Series.Reality
www.facebook.com/pages/Parallel-Universal-Presents-Alien-...
FLICKR POOLED @ PARALLEL UNIVERSAL PRESENTS: ALIEN ANONYMOUS www.flickr.com/groups/2227183@N25
PAUSE-AS-NEEDED, CONTEMPLATE AS SPIRIT MOVES:
ALL-IN FLOW-GO---FULL-SCREEN SLIDE SHOW: www.flickr.com/groups/2227183@N25/pool/show/
The Players
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.
Teddy Washington - America's Great Bandleader and his jazz band. THE PLAYERS Downtown of Jacksonville. Florida. Nikon D60 + Nikkor P 180mm f2.8 . Manual. (Teddy Washington was selected as a 2006 member of the Jacksonville Jazz Festival Hall of Fame.)
The Players
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.
Kokayi
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.
Vom 21.07. bis 06.08. 2017 veranstaltet protagon e.V. in Zusammenarbeit mit antagon theaterAKTion das internationale Theaterfestival Sommerwerft am Frankfurter Mainufer.
www.sommerwerft.de www.antagon.de www.protagon.net
„The Players“ Tanz-Performance des Choreografen Edan Gorlicki.
Maureen Yancey
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1910 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club, the University Club and the Twentieth Century Club.
A number of the financial elite of early 20th century Detroit were members of the Players, including Henry Joy, Truman Newberry, James Couzens, and Lawrence Fisher. The club continued as a successful and popular gentleman's club until the 1970s, when membership began to drop. However, the club experienced a renaissance in the 1990s, and as of 2005 there were 174 members.
Architecture
In 1925, Players Club member William E. Kapp designed a building to permanently house the club at a cost of $75,000. The building was two stories, elaborately decorated,and constructed of what was, at the time, a novel material: cinder blocks. The exterior of the club is designed in a Florentine Renaissance style. The roof is tile, and the façade boasts a triple round arch bay framed by a wrought iron balcony. Ten sculpted gargoyles were created by Corrado Parducci for the façade. Below the west entrance pavilion the legend "The Players" is traced in limestone.
The building includes a four-story high stage, as well as a kitchen, dressing rooms, basement storage and prop rooms, and a formal meeting room on the upper floor.
The interior is notable for the Art Deco murals.[ Six murals on the auditorium walls, painted by Paul Honoré, depict a traveling troupe of troubadours. Eight smaller banners represent skills and trades needed to stage a theatrical production
Bahamadia
Some pictures taken at the DC Loves Dilla - 9th Annual Tribute and Fundraiser Concert held at the Howard Theatre in Washington, DC on Thusday, July 17, 2014 by Mary Nichols (DJ Fusion of the syndicated FuseBox Radio Broadcast).
James “J Dilla” Yancey was a GRAMMY award-winning producer who inspired millions with his music including artist like Common, Raekwon, Erykah Badu, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and many many more. On February 10, 2006 just three days after his 32nd birthday, J Dilla passed away after a long time of suffering with Lupus.
Cultural Curator Munch Joseph and HedRush Music created the DC Loves Dilla movement as a way to celebrate J Dilla and honor his career works. "Carrying on the musical legacy of J Dilla for the 9th year and counting is something HedRush and myself look forward to. Personally, it's my way of paying homage to a great creator as well as doing our part to continually add balance to urban music. Dilla's music accomplishes that on many levels," says Munch Joseph when asked the motivation behind the Tribute Concert ad Fundraiser.
All pictures taken with a Sony A58 camera with various lenses.