Heywood - were also full. During the first lockdown play areas were one of many things forced to close as the Government tried to stop the spread of Covid-19.But this time around they've been allowed to stay open.
06.11.2020 - 17:39 / variety.com
Naman Ramachandran As cinemas darkened across England on Thursday for a month-long lockdown to fight the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, those in the exhibition sector are gamely playing ball, despite knowing full well that the latest enforced closure could mean that some cinemas may not reopen at all.“The biggest loss will be to our audiences,” Dan Ellis, managing director of the independent Jam Jar cinema in the northeastern seaside town of Whitley Bay, tells Variety.
“[These are]
.Heywood - were also full. During the first lockdown play areas were one of many things forced to close as the Government tried to stop the spread of Covid-19.But this time around they've been allowed to stay open.
East Kilbride say they fear for their future with Lanarkshire plunged into lockdown this week.
AviationUpClose as the second lockdown began last week.
VIP Magazine, the presenter said: ‘We would always meet once a week and it is therapy masquerading as a social drink and I am really missing that.‘That therapy is now gone and it is torture.
here"But I don’t want to be at constant loggerheads with them.
Elsa Keslassy International CorrespondentFrance’s exhibitors and distributors are aiming for a quick restart when theaters are allowed to reopen, whenever that may be.During the first lockdown, which lasted nearly three months, many French distributors took the streaming route, opting to release their films on transactional VOD services and in some cases, sell rights to SVOD platforms such as Amazon or Netflix.
David Benedict Powered — that most definitely is the word — by Michael Balogun’s blistering performance, Clint Dyer and Roy Williams’ dynamic solo play “Death of England: Delroy” is the latest and most singular theatrical victim of Covid-19. Why? Because its press night at the National Theatre was also its closing night, arriving as it did on the eve of England’s second lockdown.