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      • God Said Ha! is a 1998 filmed performance of Julia Sweeney 's one-woman play of the same.
      www.wikiwand.com › en › God_Said_Ha!
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › God_Said_Ha!God Said Ha! - Wikipedia

    God Said Ha! is a 1998 filmed performance of Julia Sweeney's one-woman play of the same. Written and directed by Sweeney, the film premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival on March 14, 1998. The play focuses on Sweeney's recollections of when her brother was diagnosed with cancer.

  3. Mar 14, 1998 · God Said, 'Ha!': Directed by Julia Sweeney. With Julia Sweeney, Quentin Tarantino. Julia Sweeney tells the viewers the monologue about the hard time in her life when her brother fought with cancer and she was also diagnosed with a rare form of cancer.

    • (1K)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Julia Sweeney
    • 1998-03-14
  4. Apr 2, 1999 · "God Said, `Ha!' " was filmed on a studio set built to look like a small theater, and though you sense the presence of a real audience, Sweeney talks directly into the camera -- a curiously ...

    • Jane Horwitz
  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › God_Said_Ha!God Said Ha! - Wikiwand

    God Said Ha! is a 1998 filmed performance of Julia Sweeney's one-woman play of the same. Written and directed by Sweeney, the film premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival on March 14, 1998. The play focuses on Sweeney's recollections of when her brother was diagnosed with cancer.

  6. Feb 26, 1999 · Directed by. Greg Kachel. There is a kind of luminous quality in the way Julia Sweeney talks about her life and family in "God Said, `Ha!'. '' She wanders the stage for an hour and a half, talking about a year in her life when her brother, Mike, was dying of cancer.

  7. Apr 24, 1998 · Closely based on Kachel’s L.A. production, “God Said, Ha!” was shot in two days. As director, Sweeney has the good sense to not endow the monologue with an elaborately “cinematic ...

  8. God Said, Ha! plumbs poignant depths, but Julia Sweeney's sharp, graceful wit makes this one-woman monologue a wise, big-hearted burst of uplifting -- and perhaps therapeutic -- entertainment.

    • (22)
    • Comedy
    • PG-13
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