NEW YORK -- Warner Bros. on Tuesday delayed the summer release of “Wonder Woman 1984” and removed the adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda's “In the Heights” from its schedule due to the coronavirus pandemic.
13.03.2020 - 00:55 / justjared.com
The 2020 Tribeca Film Festival has been postponed.
The event has been put on hold amid the coronavirus outbreak, Deadline reports.
The festival was set to take place from April 15-26.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has also declared a statewide ban of gatherings of over 500 people.
This also means that 31 Broadway productions are closing through April 12, and eight shows that would have started previews over the next month will also be postponed.
Tribeca’s features program will consist of
NEW YORK -- Warner Bros. on Tuesday delayed the summer release of “Wonder Woman 1984” and removed the adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda's “In the Heights” from its schedule due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Cute cameos! Jimmy Fallon’s two daughters made an adorable appearance as his Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: At Home Edition band.
A Los Angeles judge on Sunday postponed the murder trial of multimillionaire New York real estate heir Robert Durst for three works over fears of the transmission of the new coronavirus. Superior Court Judge Mark E.
Though productions of Hamilton in New York and Los Angeles have shut down due to coronavirus concerns, creator and former star Lin-Manuel Miranda is doing his best to lift spirits amid mounting fears.
The 2020 Tribeca Film Festival, set to run April 15-26 in New York, has been postponed due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus outbreak. A new date has not been announced.
By Anthony D'Alessandro
The 2020 Chaplin Award Gala, honoring Spike Lee, will be rescheduled for later this fall, New York's Film at Lincoln Center announced Thursday. The move comes as Film at Lincoln Center is closing two of its venues in response to ongoing health concerns related to the coronavirus.
The 2020 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards have been cancelled due to coronavirus concerns.
In today’s film news roundup, four film festivals have opted to pull the plug, the horror film “Infection” finds a home, Heidi Honeycutt gets hired and “Where the Crawdads Sing” gets a writer.
A major LGBTQ awards show set to take place in New York next week has been cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic, organisers said.
The United Nations says it will close its headquarters complex in New York to the general public and temporarily suspend all guided tours starting Tuesday evening as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus. UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the United Nations has not been advised of any COVID-19 cases among its 3,000-person staff.
Planned Parenthood of Greater New York was scheduled to join The Feminist Institute in a "Bans Off My Body" benefit concert on March 14, for gender equality and access to sexual and reproductive health care.
A tweet circulating from New York Magazine contributor Yashar Ali suggests that Coachella 2020 has been postponed. Per Ali's tweet, the megafestival will be moved to two consecutive weekends in October, marking an involuntary return to form, of sorts (the first-ever Coachella festival, which Rage Against The Machine also headlined, was held in October 1999.)
The Feminist Institute and Planned Parenthood of Greater New York have postponed the benefit concert that was set to feature a reunion of Hole’s Courtney Love and Melissa Auf der Maur. The concert, called Bans Off My Body, was set to take place this Saturday, March 14. A new date for the show has not yet been announced.