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After reading 1836 websites, we found 14 different results for "Who directed Gilda Live"
Mike Nichols
Radner was previously memorialized in another film Gilda Live, which is a 1980 American comedy documentary film starring Gilda Radner, directed by Mike Nichols and produced by Lorne Michaels.
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Nichols
In 1980, Nichols directed the documentary Gilda Live, a filmed performance of comedian Gilda Radner's one-woman show Gilda Radner Live on Broadway.
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Charles Vidor
Gilda' was directed with great panache by Charles Vidor (not to be confused with King Vidor) and gorgeously shot by Rudolph Mate who knew how to photograph Hayworth to maximum effect.
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by SNL-mastermind Lorne Michaels
Produced and directed by SNL-mastermind Lorne Michaels, Gilda Live was a big hit with audiences.
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by freshman filmmaker Lisa D’Apolito,
Directed by freshman filmmaker Lisa D’Apolito, Love, Gilda traces the former Saturday Night Live cast member’s entertainment industry journey through Gilda's own words, featuring readings from Gilda's diaries as well as interviews with Chevy Chase, Melissa McCarthy, Bill Hader, Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph, Cecily Strong, and more.
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Garfunkel
On Broadway, Garfunkel produced and directed Gilda Radner Live from New York and produced the subsequent motion picture Gilda Live.
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John Geilgud
Directed by John Geilgud, The cast included Niall MacGinnis, Edmund Breon, Nicholas Phipps, Joyce Carey, Zena Dare, Betty Chancellor and Margaret Rutherford.
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King Charles III
King Charles III made King Charles III's Broadway debut in 1979 directing Gilda Radner–Live from New York, and is pleased to return to the stage with Tina Fey, whom King Charles III met when King Charles III began as a writer for “SNL.”
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Gilda director Lisa D’Apolito
Clearly a trusted pair of hands (Gilda director Lisa D’Apolito has made films for Gilda’s Club, the charity set up in Radner’s memory), D’Apolito was given unprecedented access to family and friends, as well as a wealth of archival material including rare performance footage, handwritten notebooks, home movies (even footage of Radner in the hospital preparing for chemo), and that taped journal, which provides the film’s only narration.
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Lisa D'Apolito
Director Lisa D'Apolito does a wonderful job of bringing in the audience on some of the toughest parts of Gilda's life.
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to Dorothy Mackaill
Much of the film’s success can also be credited to Dorothy Mackaill, leading the film as Gilda.
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Graeme Harper, Dearbhla Walsh and Dez McCarthy
The directors of the show were Graeme Harper, Dearbhla Walsh and Dez McCarthy.
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Roberto Recchia
As director Roberto Recchia explains in director Roberto Recchia's programme note, “everyone, except Gilda, has a dark soul.
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