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  1. Vor einem Tag · Years before Sally Potter’s Orlando and Paul B. Preciado’s Orlando, My Political Biography came queer icon Ulrike Ottinger’s wild, sprawling interpretation of Virginia Woolf’s gender-changing time traveller, Orlando, played by cult actor Magdalena Montezuma. Alongside residents of so-called ‘Freak City’, Orlando bounces from a modern department store to the Middle Ages to the ...

  2. Vor 5 Tagen · Era Vermelho Seu Batom, 1983 — Directed by Henrique Magalhães. Henrique Magalhães, Era Vermelho Seu Batom, 1983. From the late 1970s to the mid-1980s, a surge of radical short films, shot on Super-8 by queer filmmakers, emerged in north-eastern Brazil as part of a movement termed ‘Cinema Guei.’. These films denounced conservativism and ...

  3. 6. Mai 2024 · With Magdalena Montezuma, Delphine Seyrig, Albert Heins, Claude Pantoja, Hiro Uschiyama, Galli, Eddie Constantine, Else Nabu, Therese Zemp, and many more. Jointly presented by the Barbican and the Goethe-Institut London.

  4. 6. Mai 2024 · Mit seinem langjährigen Künstlerfreund Werner Schroeter drehte von Praunheim 1968 den Kurzfilm Grotesk – Burlesk – Pittoresk mit Magdalena Montezuma in der Hauptrolle. Von Praunheim besetzte Montezuma erneut in seinem Film Macbeth Oper von Rosa von Praunheim , der nach seiner Premiere in dem New Yorker Filmkunstmuseum Anthology ...

  5. 10. Mai 2024 · Mit Rosa von Praunheim, Magdalena Montezuma, Gisela Trowe, Carla Aulaulu, Rita Bauer, Alix von Buchenen, Rosy-Rosy (Rosemarie Heinickel), Joachim Bauer, René Schönberg, Ingo Salto, Stefan von...

  6. Vor 2 Tagen · This detailed study of Isabel de Moctezuma, affectionately called ‘the last Mexica princess’, was kindly written specially for us by Anastasia Kalyuta, an ethnohistorian based at the Russian Museum of Ethnography, St. Petersburg, who has undertaken extensive research on Isabel’s life at the General Archive of the Indies in Seville, Spain.

  7. 18. Mai 2024 · On his return to Mexico, Cortés asks Moctezuma to stand on a balcony to calm his people down. In return the hapless Aztec governor receives a hail of stones and insults, wounding him in more ways than one. According to Cortés himself, it was one of these stones which led, days later, to the death of Moctezuma.