Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 18. Nov. 2022 · I HATE MEMORY! is a set of songs tracing Eszters journey from communist Hungary to70s-80s NYC by way of her parents’ radical theater group and winding its way through a Lower Manhattan mofongo of glamour, poverty, sex, drugs, darkness and yes, light.

  2. 13. Jan. 2023 · Eszter Balint: “I Hate Memory!” By Jay Ruttenberg. January 13, 2023. In the late seventies, a preteen Eszter Balint arrived in New York from Hungary, her artistic family pursuing not...

    • Condé Nast
  3. 20. Nov. 2022 · With her newly released fourth album, I Hate Memory!, Eszter Balint has taken on something she had been previously hesitant to do – telling stories about her past. Born in Hungary, her parents were founding members of the experimental theater company Squat Theatre.

  4. 19. Jan. 2023 · The architecture of I HATE MEMORY is a set of songs tracing Balints journey from communist Hungary to ’70s-80s NYC by way of her parents’ radical theater group and winding its way through a Lower East Side mofongo of glamour, poverty, sex, drugs, darkness and—yes—light.

  5. dixonplace.org › performances › i-hate-memoryI Hate Memory - Dixon Place

    About This Show. Written by Eszter Balint. Songs by Eszter Balint & Stew. Featuring: The Musicians. Directed by Lucy Sexton. Media Design: Tal Yarden. Musical director: David Nagler. An anti-musical co-starring the Streets of New York and the Late 20th Century, the show features appearances by family, film, fame, immigration, joy, theater ...

  6. 30. Juni 2022 · Songwriter/violinist/actress Eszter Balint’s stage production of I Hate Memory, originally set to premiere in 2020 but postponed due to the pandemic, is back this July 26 at NYC’s Joe’s Pub (Note: rescheduled from July 8), with another performance planned for this fall.

  7. Eszter Balint: I Hate Memory In Concert. An anti-musical co-starring the Streets of New York and the Late 20th Century featuring Family, Film, Fame, Immigration, Joy, Theater, Shame, Dance Floors, Open Doors, Papaya Ice Cream, and the Shah of Iran’s Wife.