Loading...
RSS feeds allow Web site content to be gathered via feed reader software. Click the subscribe link to obtain the feed URL for this page. The feed will update when new content appears on this page.
Sort By: Relevancy | Date | Type
Displaying items 25-36 of 43
» View wsbtradio.com items only
    Jan 12, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  1. Steven Severin: From Siouxsie to 'Music to Silents'

    Brand X
    In his Los Angeles live solo debut, goth legend Steven Severin (he of Siouxsie and the Banshees fame) will be appearing at the Cinefamily/Silent Movie Theater for two evenings, adding moody live scores to several surrealist silent shorts (including...
  2. Jul 17, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  3. Sunday's TV Highlights: 'Scoundrels' on ABC

    Show Tracker
    ‘SCOUNDRELS’: Cheryl (Virginia Madsen) realizes she may need a good attorney on a new episode at 9 p.m. on ABC. SERIES Earth Wonders: This new travel series opens with visits to Niagara Falls, Africa's Ngorongoro crater, Redwoods National Park, I...
  4. Jul 26, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. 'The Show That Smells' by Derek McCormack

    The Show That Smells
    The Show That Smells A Novel Derek McCormack Akashic Books: 120 pp., $15.95 paper Even by the standards of the paranormal romances that occupy the top slots of bestseller lists, Derek McCormack's new novel of cursed crooners, murderous fashion...

    Tags: Death, Action (genre), Hemorrhaging, Tuberculosis, Vampires (supernatural entitiess)

  6. Sep 6, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. 'The Gospel According to Coco Chanel: Life Lessons From the World's Most Elegant Woman' by Karen Karbo

    Coco Chanel is known for saying "a woman who doesn't wear perfume has no future" and "fashion passes, style remains." But did she? Bons mots have been attributed to her because they seemed like the kind of thing the witty, sharp-tongued fashion icon might say.
    Coco Chanel is known for saying "a woman who doesn't wear perfume has no future" and "fashion passes, style remains." But did she? Bons mots have been attributed to her because they seemed like the kind of thing the witty, sharp-tongued fashion icon might...

    Tags: Coco Chanel, Health and Beauty Products, World War II (1939-1945)

  8. May 18, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Will Spielberg take a walk on the wild side?

    Steven Spielberg, who at 22 was hired by Universal to a long-term contract, started out his career as the teacher's pet of the Movie Brat generation. With the unveiling of his first Indiana Jones escapade in 19 years today at Cannes, he's proffering yet another polished apple.
    Special to The Times
    Steven Spielberg, who at 22 was hired by Universal to a long-term contract, started out his career as the teacher's pet of the Movie Brat generation. With the unveiling of his first Indiana Jones escapade in 19 years today at Cannes, he's proffering yet...

    Tags: Brian de Palma, John Ford, Jurassic Park (movie), Gaming, David Lean

  10. Nov 12, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. New edition of 'Ma Gastronomie' with a Thomas Keller introduction

    He loved butter and practical jokes, had an insatiable appetite and was inclined to start his mornings by shaving outdoors with two magnums of Champagne on ice by his side. At one point, nearly half of the Michelin three-star chefs in France had trained...

    Tags: France, Dining and Drinking, Michelin Group, Cults and Sects, Death

  12. May 4, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Discoveries

    Playing With the Grown-Ups
    Playing With the Grown-Ups A Novel Sophie Dahl Doubleday/Nan A. Talese: 272 pp., $24 "She does have children, you know," Kitty's magisterial grandfather would tell potential suitors who called looking for Kitty's beautiful mother, Marina. Kitty grew...

    Tags: New York, Book, W.H. Auden, University of Chicago, Roald Dahl

  14. Jul 15, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. THE AGE OF DECADENCE

    Paris — PERHAPS the extreme opulence in Paris last week speaks to a world that now has 8.7 million millionaires, for whom a $100,000 made-to-order couture gown is a nice little trifle.
    Times Staff Writer
    Paris — PERHAPS the extreme opulence in Paris last week speaks to a world that now has 8.7 million millionaires, for whom a $100,000 made-to-order couture gown is a nice little trifle. Whatever the reason, the city was dripping with money and...

    Tags: Eyewear, Karl Lagerfeld, Shoulders, Courtney Love, Russia

  16. Aug 3, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. A poetic sort of surrealism

    Over the last half-century, Kenneth Anger has emerged as one of the icons of American avant-garde cinema. Endlessly imaginative and original, Anger is also a pioneer in expressing and exploring homoeroticism on screen in ways that are daring and often outrageous but that also elicit an inescapable sense of recognition. Anger's work reveals his fascination with the occult, and he ranges easily from the ethereal to a jangly thicket of pop culture images. Although he can evoke memories of Jean Cocteau — "Beauty and the Beast" on the one hand, "Orpheus" on the other — Anger, in his unique way, is as American as apple pie.
    Special to The Times
    Over the last half-century, Kenneth Anger has emerged as one of the icons of American avant-garde cinema. Endlessly imaginative and original, Anger is also a pioneer in expressing and exploring homoeroticism on screen in ways that are daring and often...

    Tags: University of California, Los Angeles, U.S. Navy, Television, Entertainment, Vehicles

  18. Nov 10, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. 'Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus'

    Creativity is one of life's true mysteries, but that hasn't stopped people from attempting to analyze and trivialize the source of the artistic impulse. Yet the mystery always triumphs, as it does in the simplistic but strangely poetic "Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus."
    Times Staff Writer
    Creativity is one of life's true mysteries, but that hasn't stopped people from attempting to analyze and trivialize the source of the artistic impulse. Yet the mystery always triumphs, as it does in the simplistic but strangely poetic "Fur: An...

    Tags: Photography, Arts and Culture, Nicole Kidman, Harris Yulin, Jane Alexander

  20. Jun 26, 1997 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. 'Gabbeh'

    Times Staff Writer
    Mohsen Makhmalbaf's "Gabbeh" is as exquisite as the kind of carpet that gives the film its name. In the remote steppes of southeastern Iran, now almost extinct nomadic tribes have for centuries woven gabbeh, carpets that serve as a record of incidents...

    Tags: Cinema Industry, Iran, Entertainment, Movies, Documentary (genre)

  22. May 17, 2001 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Moulin Rouge

    TIMES FILM CRITIC
    Friday May 18, 2001      "Etonne-moi"--astonish me--ballet impresario Sergei Diaghilev famously encouraged poet Jean Cocteau, and "Moulin Rouge" follows his advice. Most of the time. A fever dream of musical spectacle, its dizzying visual and melodic...

    Tags: William Shakespeare, Sting, Nicole Kidman, Theater, Craig Armstrong

< Previous1 2  3  4Next >
Original site for Jean Cocteau topic gallery.
Loading...
 
 

Date:

Credit:

User-submitted

Tags:

Rate:
Sending...

E-mail this photo

Error: malformed email address(es)
Both "from" and "recipient" email fields are required.

Recipient E-mail Addresses

(up to 3, separated by commas) Send me a copy.

From:

e-mail | buy this photo | link to photo
Jean Cocteau Photos
Opening May 10, the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume...
(January 6, 2012)