Maksymilian faktorowicz biography of martin luther king
Costume, Makeup, and Hair 9780813571539
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COS T UME , M A K E UP, A ND H A IR This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. This is a list of companiesnamed after people. For other lists of eponyms (names derived from people) see Lists of etymologies. All of these are named after founders, co-founders and partners of companies, unless otherwise stated. The term "General Collections" refers to the Seaver Center's holdings of manuscript materials and ephemeral printed materials, of which there are approximately 385 collections. View the A-Z General Collections Index Manuscript Materials: The Seaver Center collects manuscript materials relating to the history of Southern California from the earliest available to about 1940. These include, but are not limited to, letters, diaries, telegrams, memos, ledgers and other financial records, legal papers, research notes, and manuscripts and typescripts of books, scripts and short stories. Ephemeral Printed Materials: The Seaver Center preserves a large amount of other printed material, usually referred to as ephemera, which includes pamphlets, brochures, booklets, tickets, and clippings. The bulk of the Ephemera Collection consists of materials relating to Los Angeles county and city. There is also a large amount of material for other counties in California. Topics covered include tourism and promotion to California, theatre and film, Los Angeles Olympics, and Los Angeles people and places. General Collection (GC) numbers are assigned to the papers of individuals and families, records of organizations and businesses, and various artificial collections (i.e., collections of materials devoted to a single theme, person, event or type of record). In some instances, a General Collection relates to a Photograph Collection. When this occurs, the Photograph Collection is noted at the end of the collection description in parenthesis by number, for example (P-1). This guide is modified and updated on a regular basis. Los Angeles County Government Records
BEH IND THE SI LVER SCREEN
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BEHIND THE SILVER SCREEN When we take a larger view of a film’s “life” from development through exhibition, we find a variety of artists, technicians, and craftspeople in front of and behind the camera. Writers write. Actors, who are costumed and made-up, speak the words and perform the actions described in the script. Art directors and set designers develop the look of the film. The cinematographer decides upon a lighting scheme. Dialogue, sound effects, and music are recorded, mixed, and edited by sound engineers. The images, final sound mix, and special visual effects are assembled by editors to form a final cut. Moviemaking is the product of the efforts of these men and women, yet few film histories focus much on their labor. Behind the Silver Screen calls attention to the work of filmmaking. When complete, the series will comprise ten volumes, one each on ten significant tasks in front of or behind the camera, on the set or in the postproduction studio. The goal is to examine closely the various collaborative aspects of film production, one at a time and one per volume, and then to offer a chronology that allows the editors and contributors to explore the changes in each of these endeavors during six eras in film history: the silent screen (1895–1927), classical Hollywood (1928–1946), postwar Hollywood (1947–1967), the Auteur Renaissance (1968–1980), the New Hollywood (1981–1999), and the Modern Entertainment
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Marketplace (2000–present). Behind the Silver Screen promises a look at who does what in the making of a movie; it promises a history of filmmaking, not just a history of films. Jon Lewis, Series Editor 1. ACTING (Claudia Springer and Julie Levinson, eds.) 2. ANIMATION (Scott Curtis, ed.) 3. CINEMATOGRAPHY (Patrick Keating, ed.) 4. COSTUM Discussion: Unique Epics
iCivEgypt : {
iGreatProphet : [
"Ptah-Hotep", # 25th BC
"Meryre", # 15th BC
"Akhenaten", # 14th BC
"fNefertiti", # 13th BC
iClassical,
"Petiese", # 7th BC
],
iGreatArtist : [
"Pehen-Ptah", # 27th BC
"Thutmose", # 14th BC
"Bek", # 14th BC
"Ipuki", # 14th BC
"Sennedjem", # 13th
"Khaemweset", # 12th BC
"Amenemope", # 12th BC
iClassical,
"fHelena", # 4th BC
],
iGreatScientist : [
"fMerit-Ptah", # 27th BC
"fPeseshet", # 26th BC
"Ahmose", # 17th BC
iClassical,
"Harkhebi", # 3rd BC
"Manetho", # 3rd BC
"Ptolemaios", # 2nd
"Diophantos", # 3rd
"fHypatia", # 4th
],
iGreatMerchant : [
"Harkhuf", # 23rd BC
"Maya", # 13th BC
"fTiye", # 13th BC
iClassical,
"Piye", # 8th BC
"Alara", # 8th BC
],
iGreatEngineer : [
"Imhotep", # 27th BC
"Sneferu", # 27th BC
"Senenmut", # 17th BC
"Ineni", # 15th BC
"Amenhotep", # 14th BC
iClassical,
"Heron", # 1st AD
],
iGreatStatesman : [
"Kagemni", # 26th BC
"Amenemhat", # 20th BC
"fHatshepsut", # 15th BC
"Herihor", # 11th BC
],
iGreatGeneral : [
"Narmer", # 32nd BC
"Menes", # 30th BC
"Khufu", # 26th BC
"Mentuhotep", # 21st BC
"Thutmosis", # 15th BC
"Sethi", # 13th BC
],
},
iCivChina : {
iGreatProphet : [
"Lao Tzu", # 6th BC
"Kong Fuzi", # 5th BC
"Meng Zi", # 4th BC
"Zhuangzi", # 4th BC
"Han Fei", # 3rd BC
iMedieval,
"Bodhidharma", # 6th
"Bukong", # 8th
"fLin Moniang", # 10th
"Wang Chongyang", # 12th
"fSun Bu'er", # 12th
"Zhu List of companies named after people
#
A
Los Angeles County government archival records are predominantly from the Registrar and Recorder’s Office and the Tax Collector’s Office. The holdings are incomplete. Subject matter includes court records of criminal, civil and probate cases; property and tax records including tax assessments, tax receipts, re