Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
The Talented Mr Ripley
USA 1999, 139 mins. Dir. Anthony Minghella
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Singin’ in the Rain is a Hollywood story. Set at a time when the silver screen found its voice and left silent movies behind. Featuring the glorious songs from the MGM score including Good Morning, Make ‘em Laugh, Moses Supposes and the classic Singin’ in the Rain.
Need advice about what gadget to buy?
Need advice about how to use the one you have already?
Or just fancy coming along and having a play?
COFFEE & COMPUTERS IS FOR YOU
We hold informal one-to-one computer familiarisation sessions over a cup of coffee on the last Friday of the month.
No need to bring anything, just yourself.
“The computer has given me a new life” says 69 year old Coffee & Computers visitor.
So if you are over 55 (or thereabouts) and the very mention of computers bring you out in a cold sweat, call Stuart on 020 8347 2411 or email kirstenhs2012@gmail.com (quoting Coffee & Computers) and give us an idea of what you want to know more about.
Or just come along for the coffee and have a dabble.
We look forward to seeing you!
Dr Jonathan Black, Senior Research Fellow in History of Art at Kingston University and co-author of Abstraction and Reality: The Sculpture of Ivor Roberts-Jones is to give the seventh KW lecture on Monday 2nd February at 8.00 p.m. in the AV Room in the Mills Centre. Book here: https://highgateoc.org.uk/kw2015-lecture
Mezzo-soprano, Stella Seaton-Sims and her accompanist will treat the French Circle to an evening of wonderful singing.
George McGhee, former BBC Controller of Programmes, introduces extracts from some wonderful dancing partnerships from the career of the man Nureyev called, ‘the greatest dancer in American history.’
HAYDN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA with Charles Owen, piano; 7:30pm at St Michael’s Church, South Grove, in aid of Harington and Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice. Information and tickets £25, £20, £15 (reserved) and £10 (Unreserved) from Pauline Treen 020 8340 5643
As part of an going series I am hosting for 2015 celebrating Irish culture, history, politics and literature, I will be interviewing Jesse Norman about the life of Edmund Burke, in the Boogaloo Pub, Highgate.
“Hornsey Wood House” talk by John Hinshelwood. 8pm, Union Church Hall www.hornseyhistorical.org.uk
Dr David McAllister will discuss attitudes to burial in the years leading up to the birth of the Garden Cemetery movement in the early nineteenth century and the establishment of Highgate Cemetery itself. His talk will focus on attempts by a series of writers including Wordsworth, Burke, Godwin and Bentham to identify the value of buried bodies, and to establish whether the grave was anything more than an inefficient dumping ground for human remains.
David McAllister is a lecturer in Victorian Literature at Birkbeck, University of London, and course director of its MA in Victorian Studies.