All posts tagged: Ovation

Asghar Farhadi’s ‘Parallel Tales’ Premieres to Polite Ovation

Asghar Farhadi’s ‘Parallel Tales’ Premieres to Polite Ovation

Asghar Farhadi, the Iranian master whose films have twice won the best international feature Oscar (2011’s A Separation and 2016’s The Salesman) and twice won prizes at the Cannes Film Festival (The Salesman and 2021’s A Hero), premiered his latest work, Parallel Tales, at Cannes’ Grand Théâtre Lumière on Thursday night. The French-language drama, which is playing in competition at this year’s fest, was greeted with a five-minute standing ovation — which is, by Cannes standards, polite but not especially enthusiastic. Adapted by Farhadi and his brother, Saeed, from a chapter of Krzysztof Kieślowski’s 10-part project for Polish television, Dekalog (1989-1990), Parallel Tales is a study in voyeurism and the sometimes blurry line between fantasy and reality. It boasts an all-star French cast that includes Isabelle Huppert, Virginia Efira, Vincent Cassel and, in a small role, Catherine Deneuve, all of whom do fine work. But, as The Hollywood Reporter’s chief film critic David Rooney noted in his review, the film becomes a bit meandering and arduous over the course of its two-hour-twenty-minute runtime. And by the …

David Attenborough live: 100-year-old broadcaster receives standing ovation at birthday bash

David Attenborough live: 100-year-old broadcaster receives standing ovation at birthday bash

Bastille’s Dan Smith takes us back to 2013 Dan Smith from pop band Bastille (remember them?) takes to the stage for the first performance of the night with his orchestral rendition of “Pompeii” – arguably the most overplayed song of 2013. The hit song featured on the soundtrack of Planet Earth III ten years after its release. Dan Smith (BBC) Lauren Morris8 May 2026 20:53 Sir David Attenborough receives a standing ovation Sir David Attenborough receives a well earned standing ovation and takes a bow from his box in the Royal Albert Hall – with the centenarian seen sitting next to Prince William at the live event. While the BBC had not previously confirmed whether the broadcaster would be attending his own birthday bash, it simply wouldn’t be a fitting celebration without the man himself! Sir David Attenborough and Prince William (BBC) Lauren Morris8 May 2026 20:41 The show gets off to a (slightly terrifying) start If you can’t bring wild animals to the Royal Albert Hall, then you get the next best thing – …

Louis C.K. Gets Standing Ovation at Netflix Comedy Festival

Louis C.K. Gets Standing Ovation at Netflix Comedy Festival

In 2017, Louis C.K. was largely exiled from comedy after five women accused him of sexual misconduct at the height of the #MeToo movement. Cut to 2026, and he headlined a show at the Hollywood Bowl as part of the Netflix is a Joke comedy festival. C.K. took the stage in L.A. on Tuesday night, the show serving as the final stop of the worldwide “Ridiculous” tour he’s been on for the last year. The iconic venue was roughly 75 percent full, mostly of male fans in their 20s and 30s, who came to life when the comedian started his set after four opening acts. He never addressed the misconduct allegations — the women alleged that he masturbated in front of them or on the phone with them as C.K. later admitted to the behavior, saying he believed at the time it had been appropriate because he had asked first — and returned to his regular raunchy material. The hour of jokes centered heavily around sex, with bits on penises, vaginas, STDs and Barely Legal magazine. The …

Eddie Murphy receives standing ovation as he collects lifetime achievement award

Eddie Murphy receives standing ovation as he collects lifetime achievement award

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Eddie Murphy was visibly moved as he accepted the American Film Institute’s life achievement award on Saturday night. The legendary comedian and actor was honoured at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, where he reflected on his illustrious career. Addressing the star-studded audience, which included his family and long-time collaborators, Murphy shared his profound gratitude. “Seeing all of my family, all my kids, my beautiful wife, and seeing all the different people I worked with, I’m just really filled up,” he stated. “This is a special moment. I wish y’all could feel what I’m feeling, see what I’m seeing. I almost teared up. I’m going to get backstage and cry.” Before accepting the prestigious accolade, Murphy was met with a resounding standing ovation. Dave Chappelle, Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers, Robert Townsend, and Judge Reinhold attend the 51st AFI Life Achievement Award: …

Rachel Zegler claims she received the longest standing ovation in the West End

Rachel Zegler claims she received the longest standing ovation in the West End

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter American actor Rachel Zegler has lauded her balcony performance in the musical Evita as “amazing” and “innovative”. The 24-year-old made her West End debut in Sir Tim Rice and Lord Andrew Lloyd-Webber’s production in 2025, captivating large outdoor audiences as she sang the show’s most popular number, “Don’t Cry For Me, Argentina”, from an external balcony. “I thought it was the most amazing, innovative thing that’s ever happened. There were more people at closing night outside, than there were sat inside… it went all the way down to the Ikea,” Zegler said on BBC One’s The Claudia Winkleman Show. The performance took place at the London Palladium, located a short distance from the furniture retailer’s Oxford Street branch. In the production, Zegler starred as Argentine politician Eva Perón, charting her ascent from actor to First Lady and her transformation into a …

Please, Don’t Give Harris Dickinson a Standing Ovation

Please, Don’t Give Harris Dickinson a Standing Ovation

Like Lennon, Dickinson seems slyly unknowable. There’s a stillness and slight hesitation to him as he speaks, offsetting tired responses with a smooth deadpan and half smile. When asked if he ever knowingly deploys his charms, he replies, “Yes. I’m good with old people if I need to be.” But overall, “I don’t think I’d describe myself as charming. Someone that thinks they’re charming is probably obnoxious, is the honest answer.” When Dickinson auditioned to play a male model in Triangle of Sadness, director Ruben Östlund immediately dismissed the actor as being “too shy to really give me what I wanted,” as he told Dazed last year. But within a half hour of improv, Östlund recalled, the actor was screaming profanities “with a full-on authentic volcanic anger. I had never before seen a similar transition.” Dickinson is also comfortable exploring his characters’ sexuality and secret desires, as he did in his 2017 indie breakthrough, Beach Rats. “I can hide between ‘action’ and ‘cut,’” he says of his onscreen disappearing acts. “There’s a very safe, liminal …