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After reading 1554 websites, we found 20 different results for "Who directed Slaves of New York"
Steve McQueen
Directed by Steve McQueen (Hunger, Shame) and written by John Ridley, the film tells the tale of a free African American man living in New York State, Solomon Northup, who is tricked and sold into slavery in the deep South.
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James Ivory
In the 1989 film, Slaves of New York, directed by James Ivory, an excerpt from the 1986 Newport Classic recording, with John Ostendorf, is heard.
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Nate Parker
Led by slave Nat Turner, played by the director, Nate Parker, the film doesn’t hold back on the brutality of slave ownership and
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by Michel Gondryand
New York was directed by Michel Gondry, a well-known French director of Human Nature, and the story of the movie was written by Charlie Kaufman of Being John Malkovich and Adaptation and Pierre Bismuth as well as Gondry.
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Merchant Ivory
Slaves of New York Slaves of New York is a 1989 American comedy-drama Merchant Ivory Productions film.
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Mario Van Peebles
Through director Mario Van Peebles constant sights of slum infested New York
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Tony Richardson
This may have helped the unsentimental drama become sentimentalized over the years, after having been a play in the UK and the U.S., a movie, and fodder for a musical standard: Tony Richardson directed the New York production, as well as the classic, Bafta-winning film (for the movie, the movie's screenplay, and the actresses), and Tony Richardson co-wrote the hit song, from which Tony Richardson never recouped royalties (Tony Richardson did not share credit; Bobby Scot and Ric Marlow did).
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The black British director Steven McQueen
The black British director Steven McQueen wanted to direct a film about slavery in the United States, and Northrup recruited the black American writer John Ridley to help Northrup develop a script.
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John G. Blystone
The movie, about a quartet of college chums who all move to 1934 New York City, was written by James Gleason and Sonya Levien from Kathleen Norris's novel, Manhattan Love Song and directed by John G. Blystone.
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by Ari Edelson ,
Originally produced in March at five American theaters around the country as part of the National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere, the New York production is dispassionately directed by Ari Edelson and co-stars stage, film and television actors James Badge Dale and Tamara Tunie in this taut two-character play.
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Max Weissberg
New York’s a feature length movie by up-and-coming director Max Weissberg, a New York native.
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The movie , directed by Ron Howard from Peter Morgan's play of the same name, which ran to huge success in both London and New York,
The movie, directed by Ron Howard from Peter Morgan's play of the same name, which ran to huge success in both London and New York, is an electrifying tale of the two men's televised encounters that led to Nixon finally admitting wrongdoing in the Watergate scandal.
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by Sam Shepard
The New York production was directed by Sam Shepard, with sets by Brien Vahey costumes by Joan Bergin, lighting by John Comiskey, sound by Dan Moses Schreier; the production stage manager was
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Madison
When the British set fire to the newly constructed White House in 1814, Madison was credited with saving Gilbert Stuart's classic 1796 portrait of George Washington; Madison directed Madison's personal slave Paul Jennings to save it.[3]
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by Academy Award winner John Ridley,
The film has generated considerable buzz, not just because of the subject of the film, or the masterfully talented actor who plays My Side, but because the film was written and directed by Academy Award winner John Ridley, of 12 Years a Slave fame.
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Newton resident James DeWolf Perry
“Newton resident James DeWolf Perry had heard stories from Newton resident James DeWolf Perry's family’s distant past, but until Newton resident James DeWolf Perry started work on a film about slavery
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by Dudley Murphy
NYC is conceived by Adolph Bolm and directed by Dudley Murphy, with lighting and filming by Francis Bruigière and animation by F.A.A. Dahme.
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distinguished filmmaker Sam Pollard
The documentary film based on Slavery by Another Name was directed by distinguished filmmaker Sam Pollard, with more than $1.5 million in funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, and major corporate sponsors.
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by Antoine Fuqua, which cost $120 million (about R2 billion) to make
So far the slavery drama directed by Antoine Fuqua, which cost $120 million (about R2 billion) to make, has only earned an average of $3k (R51 000) per screening.
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