Tumgik
#boyle brutal orchestra
goo-dripley-art · 3 months
Text
recreation of a moment in my first brutal orchestra run
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
73 notes · View notes
brokenpuns · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
hylic orchestra 2
67 notes · View notes
corpusboard · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
83 notes · View notes
hmm-ctrl · 1 year
Text
heeehehe (evil laughter) so guess who got mildly obsessed with media
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
bonus :)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
57 notes · View notes
theoretical-trash · 11 months
Link
Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Brutal Orchestra (Video Game) Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings Characters: Nowak (Brutal Orchestra), Bosch (Brutal Orchestra), Boyle (Brutal Orchestra), Griffin (Brutal Orchestra) Additional Tags: Character Death, Purgatory, mild body horror Series: Part 1 of Brutal Orchestra Fanfic Summary:
Nowak decides to ask Boyle a few questions about a certain someone claiming to be invisible.
4 notes · View notes
fvaleraye · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I enjoy interpreting the Brutal Orchestra sprites.
Reblogs are appreciated <3
21 notes · View notes
loud-re-noisy · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
“We will find peace. No matter the cost, I promise us this.”
The first of many cards based of “Hieronymus Bosch’s Brutal Orchestra” by Talia Mair and Nicolás Delgado. First up the main protagonist and deuteragonist, “Nowak” and “Bosch”.
My plan right now is to make a deck of all the characters selectable from the main menu. So Nowak, Boyle & Hans… all the way to Gospel.
61 notes · View notes
londontheatre · 7 years
Link
With Book by James Goldman, Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, and Directed by Dominic Cooke at the Olivier Theatre.
1971, New York. There’s a party on the stage of the Weismann Theatre. Tomorrow the iconic building will be demolished. Thirty years after their final performance, the Follies girls gather to have a few drinks, sing a few songs and lie about themselves. Including such classic songs as Broadway Baby, I’m Still Here and Losing My Mind, Stephen Sondheim’s legendary musical is staged for the first time at the NT. Tracie Bennett, Janie Dee and Imelda Staunton play the magnificent Follies in this dazzling new production. Featuring a cast of 37 and an orchestra of 21, the production is directed by Dominic Cooke (Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom).
Director Dominic Cooke said: “Sondheim is one of the great innovators of modern theatre. Everything he has written breaks new ground thematically and finds a fresh form to express it. His restless, questing spirit defines, for me, what it means to be an artist. I love Follies for its iconic score, brutal honesty and psychological accuracy. It depicts a profound crisis and that most American of themes: the question for authenticity in a world of illusion.
For this production we have put together a book mainly drawn from original 1971 text with some additions from later rewrites. We have brought together an incredible cast and a top notch team. I can’t wait to get started.”
Winner of Academy, Tony, Grammy and Olivier awards, Sondheim’s previous work at the NT includes A Little Night Music, Sweeney Todd and Sunday in the Park with George.
The cast includes Julie Armstrong (Sandra Crane), Norma Attallah (Emily Whitman), Josephine Barstow (Heidi Schiller), Jeremy Batt (Chorus Boy) Tracie Bennett (Carlotta Campion), Di Botcher (Hattie Walker), Billy Boyle (Theodore Whitman), Janie Dee (Phyllis Rogers Stone), Anouska Eaton (Young Emily), Liz Ewing (Company), Geraldine Fitzgerald (Solange Lafitte), Peter Forbes (Buddy Plummer), Emily Goodenough (Showgirl), Bruce Graham (Roscoe), Adrian Grove (Sam Deems), Fred Haig (Young Buddy), Aimee Hodnett (Young Hattie), Dawn Hope (Stella Deems), Liz Izen (Deedee West), Alison Langer (Young Heidi), Emily Langham (Young Carlotta), Sarah-Marie Maxwell (Young Solange), Ian McLarnon (Company), Leisha Mollyneux (Young Stella), Gemma Page (Christine Donovan), Kate Parr (Young Sandra), Philip Quast (Ben Stone), Edwin Ray (Chorus Boy), Gary Raymond (Dimitri Weismann), Adam Rhys-Charles (Young Ben), Jordan Shaw (Chorus Boy), Imelda Staunton (Sally Durrant Plummer), Zizi Strallen (Young Phyllis), Barnaby Thompson (Chorus Boy), Christine Tucker (Young Deedee), Michael Vinsen (Chorus Boy) and Alex Young (Young Sally).
Follies is designed by Vicki Mortimer, with choreography by Bill Deamer, musical supervision by Nicholas Skilbeck, orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick, additional orchestrations by Josh Clayton, musical director Nigel Lilley, lighting design by Paule Constable and sound designer by Paul Groothuis.
The original production of Follies premiered on Broadway in 1971, where it was nominated for eleven Tony Awards, and won seven. The show premiered in London in 1987, and has been revived around the world many times to great acclaim. This 2017 staging will be the first time the musical has been performed at the National Theatre.
Supported by the Follies production syndicate. Press Night: Wednesday 6 September
http://ift.tt/2rIxdVX LondonTheatre1.com
0 notes