CHICAGO – The great and lofty Steppenwolf Theatre of Chicago has brought the current political season right on target with “POTUS: Or Behind Every Great Dumbass are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive,” now extended through December 17th. Click POTUS.
Andrew Rossi
HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: 50 Pairs of Passes to Fashion Exhibition Doc ‘The First Monday in May’
Submitted by HollywoodChicago.com on April 13, 2016 - 9:35am- 2016 Met Gala
- Adam Fendelman
- Andrew Bolton
- Andrew Rossi
- Anna Wintour
- Baz Luhrmann
- Costume Institute
- HollywoodChicago.com Content
- HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: Film
- Jean-Paul Gaultier
- John Galliano
- Kar-Wai Wong
- Karl Lagerfeld
- Magnolia Pictures
- Music Box Theatre
- Rihanna
- The First Monday in May
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Tribeca Film Festival
- Vogue
CHICAGO – In the latest HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: Film, we have 50 pairs of advance-screening movie passes up for grabs to the new fashion exhibition documentary “The First Monday in May” about The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s most attended exhibition in history!
Blu-Ray Review: ‘Page One’ Chronicles Best of Times, Worst of Times
Submitted by mattmovieman on October 26, 2011 - 6:19amCHICAGO – Billing Andrew Rossi’s documentary “Page One” as a year in the life of The New York Times is a trifle misleading. Such a sprawling premise would demand a running time better suited to a miniseries than a 92-minute feature. Rossi limits his focus to the Media Desk and the reporters struggling to keep their paper relevant, but like all great documentaries, the film is about so much more than the figures inhabiting its foreground.
Film Review: Change Comes in ‘Page One: Inside The New York Times’
Submitted by BrianTT on June 30, 2011 - 10:13amCHICAGO – Will my kids read newspapers? It’s a question that I’ve asked myself multiple times over the years, more so as so many of them have been closed down by the explosion of technology that demanded change. With more and more people getting their news through new delivery systems, what will happen to institutions like The New York Times?
