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  1. Maxine Doyle
    American actress, primarily worked in the 1930s and 1940s and known for her work at Republic Pictures

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  1. Apr 4, 2024 · Maxine Doyle is an independent choreographer and director with an MA in choreography from the Laban Centre.

  2. About Maxine. Since 2002 she has been Director and Choreographer for Punchdrunk, with whom she co-directed the multi-award-winning Sleep No More (London, Boston, New York, Shanghai), The Drowned Man, The House Where Winter Lives, The Firebird Ball, Faust, Masque of the Red Death, Tunnel 228, The Duchess of Malfi (an operatic collaboration with ...

  3. Dec 8, 2022 · We crave interaction, flesh and blood, touch and heartbeats,” says the director and choreographer Maxine Doyle, reflecting on Punchdrunks triumphant re-emergence in the wake of the...

    • 6 min
    • Frances Hedges
  4. May 25, 2011 · It’s a site-specific interpretation of Macbeth (with some Hitchcock Rebecca thrown in for good measure) that fills every nook and cranny of the hotel’s six stories with evocative, intricately detailed sets—a mental ward, a cemetery, a ’30s-style hotel, that fateful banquet hall.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Maxine_DoyleMaxine Doyle - Wikipedia

    Maxine Doyle (January 1, 1915 – May 7, 1973) was an American film actress who appeared in almost 40 films between 1933 and 1946. Today's audiences may know Maxine Doyle from her appearance in the Leon Errol musical short Service with a Smile (1934), one of the first films in full Technicolor, which was restored and revived by Warner Bros.

  6. Apr 19, 2022 · Emma Cole, center, a historical consultant for “The Burnt City,” with Maxine Doyle and Felix Barrett of Punchdrunk. Cole said Punchdrunk’s innovation had “the exact same spirit” as Greek...

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  8. Feb 9, 2022 · “It’s about really indulging the senses,” Maxine Doyle, a choreographer and a co-creator of “Sleep No More,” said on that same video call with Barrett.

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