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・ Philip Reeve
・ Philip Reid
・ Philip Reid (sportswriter)
・ Philip Reilly
・ Philip Reinagle
・ Philip Reis
・ Philip Remler
・ Philip Repyngdon
・ Philip Rhoden
・ Philip Rhodes
・ Philip Richard Fendall I
・ Philip Richard Fendall II
・ Philip Richard Morris
・ Philip Richardson
・ Philip Ridder
Philip Ridley
・ Philip Riedesel zu Camberg
・ Philip Riefers
・ Philip Rieff
・ Philip Riker
・ Philip Ringwood
・ Philip Riteman
・ Philip Ritte
・ Philip Rivers
・ Philip RN Sutton
・ Philip Robert Presants
・ Philip Roberts
・ Philip Robertson
・ Philip Robertson (British Army officer)
・ Philip Robertson (chemist)


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Philip Ridley : ウィキペディア英語版
Philip Ridley

Philip Ridley (born 1964 in East London)〔(Doollee.com )〕 is an English artist working with various media.
== Biography ==
Ridley was born in Bethnal Green, in the East End of London, where he lived and worked until moving to Ilford.〔(Interview with The Stage, 16 March 2015. )〕 Ridley studied painting at Saint Martin's School of Art and his work has been exhibited throughout Europe and Japan. He started as both a performance artist and the creator of a long sequence of charcoal drawings called ''The Epic of Oracle Foster''.〔(Philip Ridley – Sparkleshark )〕 One drawing from this sequence, "''Corvus Cum''", portraying a man ejaculating a black bird, was exhibited at the ICA in London while Ridley was still a student and – with calls for it to be displayed behind a curtain – became a ''cause célèbre''.〔(Philip Ridley – the best British playwright of the past 20 years )〕 Ridley also started his own theatre group as a student, acting in many of the productions, and made several short art films, including ''Visiting Mr Beak'' which starred the veteran actor Guy Rolfe. His short film for Channel 4, ''The Universe of Dermot Finn'', was officially selected for the Cannes Film Festival, where it was a critical success and went on to receive theatrical distribution.〔(Philip Ridley – Penguin Books Authors – Penguin Books )〕
Ridley has written three books for adults, ''Crocodilia'', ''In the Eyes of Mr. Fury'', and ''Flamingoes in Orbit''; the screenplay for ''The Krays''〔''(The Krays film )'' Retrieved 19 September 2007〕 feature film; 12 adult stage plays: ''The Pitchfork Disney'', the multi-award-winning ''The Fastest Clock in the Universe'', ''Ghost from a Perfect Place'', ''Vincent River'', the controversial ''Mercury Fur'', ''Leaves of Glass'', ''Piranha Heights'', ''Tender Napalm'', ''Shivered'', ''Dark Vanilla Jungle'', ''Radiant Vermin'' and ''Tonight with Donny Stixx''; plus a further five plays for young people (known collectively as ''The Storyteller Sequence''): ''Karamazoo'', ''Fairytaleheart'', ''Moonfleece'', ''Sparkleshark'' and ''Brokenville'' as well as a play for the whole family ''Feathers in the Snow''.〔(www.Vampire-World.com – Filmreviews: Schrei in der Stille (OT: The Reflecting Skin) )〕
He has also directed three feature films from his own screenplays: ''Heartless'', ''The Reflecting Skin'' – winner of 11 international awards – and ''The Passion of Darkly Noon''〔(Sitges '09: My Sitges Story – Part 5 )〕 (winner of the Best Director Prize at the Porto Film Festival) and two short films, ''Visiting Mr Beak'' and ''The Universe of Dermot Finn''.〔(Puffin Books: ''Philip Ridley'' )〕
His children's books include ''Scribbleboy'' (shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal), ''Kasper in the Glitter'' (nominated for the Whitbread Prize), ''Mighty Fizz Chilla'' (shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book of the Year Award) and ''Krindlekrax'' (winner of both the Smarties Prize and the WH Smith Mind-Boggling Book Award). The stage play of ''Krindlekrax'' – adapted by Ridley himself – premiered at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in the summer of 2002.
He is also a photographer – he created the cover images for ''Ridley: Plays 1'' and ''Ridley: Plays 2'', (published by Methuen) and regularly exhibits portraits of friends and images of East London, the two main themes of his photographic output – and a poet (his work has appeared in several collections). He co-wrote, with Nick Bicât, two songs that appeared in his film ''The Passion of Darkly Noon'', ("Who Will Love Me Now?", sung by PJ Harvey – later covered by Sunscream – and "Look What You've Done" sung by Gavin Friday). In 2010 Ridley and Bicât formed the music group 'Dreamskin Cradle' and released their first album ''Songs From Grimm'' on all major download sites.〔http://us5.campaign-archive1.com/?u=6f84bab592a657a3b330b39b2&id=8feb078426〕 Ridley has won both the ''Evening Standards Most Promising Newcomer to British Film and Most Promising Playwright Awards. He is the only person ever to receive both prizes.〔( Extremely detailed list of Ridley's credits (in French), compiled by Sébastien Cagnoli )〕
Ridley's third film as writer-director, ''Heartless'', premiered at the Frightfest horror film festival in London in August 2009.〔(Go Behind-the-Scenes of Heartless )〕 The film stars Jim Sturgess, Clémence Poésy, Noel Clarke, Eddie Marsan, Luke Treadaway, Ruth Sheen and Timothy Spall, and was released in the UK in May 2010.〔(A Heartless Trailer Debut )〕 It was the first mainstream British film to be released across all platforms (theatrical, DVD, Blu-ray, download) at the same time.〔(Lionsgate plots digital release strategy for Heartless | News | Screen )〕 In addition, a new collection of his adult plays was published by Methuen (including ''Vincent River'', ''Mercury Fur'', ''Leaves of Glass'' and ''Piranha Heights'', with a new introduction by Ridley). An opera for teenagers titled ''Tarantula in Petrol Blue'' by Aldeburgh Music also premiered in 2009.
He was featured on BBC 2's flagship arts programme ''The Culture Show'' on 2 March 2012.〔(BBC )〕

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