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Cast Carolyn Brown. Average rating 6,9 / 10. release date 2019. score 107 Vote. directed by Alla Kovgan. This song spoke to me. It is a very popular song in Jamaica. I cried to this song. Beautiful. It has been a blessing on my life. May God continue to bless you and your family. Damn 20 seconds ago. I dont know is i'm crazy but her singing kind of reminds me of thom yorke from radiohead. Why arent you more famous thats all i have to say. Critics Consensus Cunningham may frustrate viewers hoping for a purer distillation of its subject's work, but it remains a solid tribute to a brilliant talent. 86% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 49 100% Audience Score User Ratings: 5 Cunningham Ratings & Reviews Explanation Tickets & Showtimes The movie doesn't seem to be playing near you. Go back Enter your location to see showtimes near you. Cunningham Videos Movie Info CUNNINGHAM traces Merce's artistic evolution over three decades of risk and discovery (1944-1972) from his early years as a struggling dancer in postwar New York to his emergence as one of the world's most visionary choreographers. The 3D technology weaves together Merce's philosophies and stories, creating a visceral journey into his innovative work. A breathtaking explosion of dance, music, and never-before-seen archival material, CUNNINGHAM is a timely tribute to one of the world's greatest modern dance artists. Rating: PG (for some smoking) Genre: Directed By: In Theaters: Dec 13, 2019 limited Runtime: 93 minutes Studio: Magnolia Pictures Cast News & Interviews for Cunningham Critic Reviews for Cunningham Audience Reviews for Cunningham Cunningham Quotes News & Features.

I see that marvel poster in the background. Ward Cunningham Cunningham in December 2011 Born Howard G. Cunningham May 26, 1949 (age 70) Michigan City, Indiana, U. S. Alma mater Purdue University Occupation Programmer Years active 1984–present Known for WikiWikiWeb, the first implementation of a wiki Call-sign K9OX Howard G. Ward " Cunningham (born May 26, 1949) 1] is an American programmer who developed the first wiki and was a co-author of the Manifesto for Agile Software Development. A pioneer in both design patterns and extreme programming, he started coding the WikiWikiWeb in 1994, and installed it on the website of the software consultancy he started with his wife, Karen, 2] Cunningham & Cunningham (commonly known by its domain name. on March 25, 1995, as an add-on to the Portland Pattern Repository. He has authored a book about wikis, entitled The Wiki Way. He also invented Framework for Integrated Tests. Cunningham was a keynote speaker at the first three instances of the WikiSym conference series on wiki research and practice, and also at the Wikimedia Developer Summit 2017. [3] Education and employment [ edit] Cunningham was born in Michigan City, Indiana and grew up in Highland, Indiana, staying there through high school. [4] He received his Bachelor's degree in interdisciplinary engineering ( electrical engineering and computer science) and his master's degree in computer science from Purdue University, graduating in 1978. [5] He is a founder of Cunningham & Cunningham, Inc. He has also served as Director of R&D at Wyatt Software and as Principal Engineer in the Tektronix Computer Research Laboratory. He is founder of The Hillside Group and has served as program chair of the Pattern Languages of Programming conference which it sponsors. Cunningham was part of the Smalltalk community. From December 2003 until October 2005, he worked for Microsoft Corporation in the " Patterns & Practices " group. From October 2005 to May 2007, he held the position of Director of Committer Community Development at the Eclipse Foundation. In May 2009, Cunningham joined AboutUs as its chief technology officer. [6] 7] On March 24, 2011 The Oregonian reported that Cunningham had quietly departed AboutUs to join Venice Beach-based CitizenGlobal, a startup working on crowd-sourced video content, as their chief technology officer and the Co-Creation Czar. [8] He remains "an adviser" with AboutUs. [9] 10] Cunningham left CitizenGlobal and is now a programmer at New Relic. [11] Ideas and inventions [ edit] Ward Cunningham looking back on his work, May 2014 Cunningham is well known for a few widely disseminated ideas which he originated and developed. The most famous among these are the wiki and many ideas in the field of software design patterns, made popular by the Gang of Four (GoF. He owns the company Cunningham & Cunningham Inc., a consultancy that has specialized in object-oriented programming. He also created the site (and software) WikiWikiWeb, the first internet wiki. When asked in a 2006 interview with whether he considered patenting the wiki concept, he explained that he thought the idea "just sounded like something that no one would want to pay money for. 12] Cunningham is interested in tracking the number and location of wiki page edits as a sociological experiment and may even consider the degradation of a wiki page as part of its process to stability. "There are those who give and those who take. You can tell by reading what they write. 13] In 2011, Cunningham created Smallest Federated Wiki, a tool for wiki federation, which applies aspects of software development such as forking to wiki pages. He signed the Manifesto for Agile Software Development [14] Patterns and extreme programming [ edit] Ward Cunningham has contributed to the practice of object-oriented programming, in particular the use of pattern languages and (with Kent Beck) the class-responsibility-collaboration cards. He also contributes to the extreme programming software development methodology. Much of this work was done collaboratively on the first wiki site. Cunningham's Law [ edit] Ward is credited with the idea: The best way to get the right answer on the Internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer. 15] This refers to the observation that people are quicker to correct a wrong answer than to answer a question. According to Steven McGeady, Cunningham advised him of this on a whim in the early 1980s, and McGeady dubbed this Cunningham's law. [16] Although originally referring to interactions on Usenet, the law has been used to describe how other online communities work, such as Wikipedia. [17] Ironically, Cunningham himself denies ownership of the law, calling it a "misquote that disproves itself by propagating through the internet. 18] Personal life [ edit] Cunningham lives in Beaverton, Oregon. [11] He holds an Amateur Radio Extra Class license issued by the Federal Communications Commission, and his call sign is Kilo Nine Oscar X-ray, K9OX. [19] 20] 21] 22] Cunningham is Nike 's first Code for a Better World Fellow. [23] Publications [ edit] Leuf, Bo; Cunningham, Ward (2001. The Wiki Way. Addison-Wesley Professional. ISBN   978-0201714999. See also [ edit] Camel case Christopher Alexander – Cunningham cites Alexander's work as directly influencing his own. Framework for integrated test PatternShare Software design pattern References [ edit] Harry Henderson (2009. Encyclopedia of Computer Science and Technology. Facts On File. p. 122. ISBN   978-0-8160-6382-6. ^ Lih, Andrew (2009. The Wikipedia Revolution, p. 58. Hyperion, New York. ISBN   9781401303716. ^ Wikimedia Developer Summit 2017 Program. Retrieved January 17, 2017. ^ Ward's Home Page. Retrieved September 29, 2018. ^ The Wikipedia Revolution - Andrew Lih, page 46 ^ Bishop, Todd. (January 26, 2004) Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Microsoft Notebook: Wiki pioneer planted the seed and watched it grow. Section: Business; Page D1. ^ Rogoway, Mike (May 18, 2007. Inventor of the wiki has a new job in Portland. The Oregonian business blog. ^ Our Proven Leadership Team. Citizen Global Website. Archived from the original on May 12, 2012. Retrieved May 8, 2012. ^ Rogoway, Mike (March 24, 2011. Ward Cunningham, inventor of the wiki, has a new job in SoCal. The Oregonian business blog. ^ Ward Cunningham Joins CitizenGlobal. March 31, 2011. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. ^ a b "Ward Cunningham Joins the New Relic Family. New Relic Blog. April 5, 2013. Retrieved December 2, 2014. ^ Kerner, Sean Michael (December 8, 2006) Q&A with Ward Cunningham, archived from the original on September 16, 2012 ^ CubeSpace, Portland Oregon (December 7, 2008. Ward Cunningham, Lecture. Cyborg Camp Live Stream – Mogulus Live Broadcast. Archived from the original on February 7, 2009. ^ Manifesto for Agile Software Development. June 11, 2019. ^ Jurisimprudence. Schott's Vocab Blog. Retrieved January 4, 2017. ^ McGeady, Steven (May 28, 2010. Cunningham's Law. Schott's Vocab. New York Times. Comment No. 119. Retrieved August 30, 2012. n. b. named after Ward Cunningham, a colleague of mine at Tektronix. This was his advice to me in the early 1980s with reference to what was later dubbed USENET, but since generalized to the Web and the Internet as a whole. Ward is now famous as the inventor of the Wiki. Ironically, Wikipedia is now perhaps the most widely-known proof of Cunningham's Law. ^ Friedman, Nancy (May 31, 2010. Word of the Week: Cunningham's Law. Retrieved August 30, 2012. ^ Cunningham (October 18, 2015) NOT CUNNINGHAM'S LAW, retrieved December 20, 2017 ^ Federal, Communications Commission. "K9OX. United States Government. Retrieved November 4, 2016. ^ Federal, Communications Commission. "Ward Cunningham. K9OX, Expired. Retrieved November 4, 2016. ^ TenTec, Wiki. Ten Tec Wiki. Retrieved November 4, 2016. ^ Nike Materials Index: Open Data Hackathon. San Francisco Chronicle. August 6, 2009. Archived from the original on October 7, 2011. Retrieved August 23, 2011. External links [ edit] WikiWikiWeb, including his WikiHomePage 2012 Dr. Dobb's Interview EclipseCon 2006 interview with Ward Cunningham (MP3 audio podcast, running time 20:01) The Microsoft patterns & practices group home page The Simplest Thing That Could Possibly Work (2004 interview) The Web's wizard of working together " – profile originally in The Oregonian, December 19, 2005 You can look it up: The Wikipedia story – excerpt from the 2014 book The Innovators.

Ok but umm best original Christmas song of 2019.

This song lifts me up every time.

Movies, ‘Cunningham Review: Exploring Space, Time and Dance in 3-D Critics Pick Alla Kovgans documentary about Merce Cunningham shows aspects of his choreography that can be difficult to convey on conventional film. Credit. Mko Malkhasyan/Magnolia Pictures Published Dec. 11, 2019 Updated Dec. 13, 2019 Cunningham NYT Critic's Pick Directed by Alla Kovgan Documentary, Biography, Music PG 1h 33m More Information The screen is flat, but the space is round, both infinite and enveloping. The human figures in it, camouflaged, should blend in with the background. But they stick out in every direction, moving every which way. This thrilling fragment of the choreographer Merce Cunninghams 1958 dance “Summerspace” is sufficient justification to make a documentary about Cunningham in 3-D. The technology conveys aspects of his radical aesthetic that are otherwise difficult to suggest on film. And thats only one reason that Alla Kovgans “Cunningham” is an excellent introduction to a great body of work that can be hard to get a handle on. One of Cunninghams many innovations was to dissolve the spatial organization and frontal focus of the proscenium stage, making all parts equal, with dancers facing and moving in any orientation and often several things happening at once. Kovgans film doesnt reproduce this so much as find a vivid equivalent. The camera, choosing what you see, diminishes the feeling of simultaneity. But by moving into and through the dances in 3-D, it offers an immersive sense of what Cunningham called “a space in which anything can happen. ” It helps you see how the air around a dancer can seem as alive as the flesh. If 3-D helps put Cunningham across, it isnt required. Some of the most seductive footage here isnt the new performances of old works (1942-1972) that Kovgan filmed in 3-D, like “Summerspace, ” but lower-resolution, 2-D archival footage, much of it rare and irreplaceable. What makes it irreplaceable are the original performers, especially Cunningham himself, surely one of the greatest dancers of all time. His longtime muse Carolyn Brown speaks of his “quiet center” and “animal authority”; we see all that and more. Its another strength of the film that the voices we hear are hers and his and those of other company members, recorded long ago. No current-day experts are needed to establish the core ideas of the Cunningham aesthetic, from the use of chance in composition to the independence of dance and music. The choice not to use new or outside voices keeps us in the period, and it helps preserve a Cunningham-like tact around personal facts. Although much of the film proceeds in chronological order, theres almost no biographical back story; the long-shrouded relationship between Cunningham and the composer John Cage is delicately (and moving) presented in a single exchange of inexplicit letters. Likewise, tensions between Cunningham and his dancers arent hidden, but theyre not over-explained, either. Emotion roils beneath a deceptively placid surface. A story accrues. The same tact extends to questions of meaning. Cunninghams practical-gnomic explanations illuminate without shutting down options. Kovgan doesnt follow Cunninghams courage all the way, though. As if to compensate for the lack of 3-D in the archival material, she collages it, splitting the screen into many panels. Its artful but effortful, drawing too much attention to itself. Thats also true of much of the new footage. The elegant camera movements and dramatic settings chosen by Kovgan — dance in a formal garden that the camera glides away from, over a pond, like a dragonfly — are beautiful but often distract from what they are intended to display. The 90-minute film excerpts 14 works, which means that the snippets are quite short. This excerpting has a precedent in Cunningham practice. He liked to mix up pieces of many works in one-off performances called Events. Formally and philosophically, his focus was on each moment, with little linear development. The well-chosen selections in “Cunningham” reproduce the variety of a Cunningham Event, and give the Cunningham experience of luminous instants. But what the film doesnt give is an accurate sense of Cunningham time. In a Cunningham dance, the mind can wander, experience different rates of change, be baffled, engrossed, astonished, bored. The price of Kovgans efficiency is impatience, always cutting away and moving on. “Cunningham” registers the resistance that its subject encountered: the puzzlement, the thrown fruit. But as a film, it doesnt take comparable risks, so it precludes the possibility of certain rewards, ones you have to see the full dances to get. Thats what makes it a good introduction. Cunningham Rated PG. Running time: 1 hour 33 minutes.

10:19 omg you look just like Dylan is in Trouble but without his glasses tf

  • Great to see a film about dancing! A relatively unexplored sub-genre of documentary, and Cunningham was welcome for this alone. It adds to a hole that I suppose Wenders' Pina opened.

  • On that note, this film should not have been shot in 3d, which added nothing but nausia. We expect the 3d was entirely for the purpose of (a) copying Pina and, relatedly, b) getting funding. But Cunningham's dances are far less spectacular and their presentation here likewise. The 3d only distracts from the movement in all but one Warhol-involved set, especially when edited with 2d archival.

  • First half entertaining, second boring. The film progresses at a monotonous pace: one thing happens and then another and then another. No real conflict or tension.

Which is a problem. Because there evidently was plenty of this, but only in reality. The movie, on the other hand, brushes past unconvincingly. No one in the film is given space apart from Cunningham - everyone else speaks to convince the audience how great he is. I wanted to hear from one of his female dancers honestly, in long form, of the darkness of Cunningham. This would help to flesh out his character, give us something to chew on, and organise the film into a narrative. As is, we grew progressively distrusting and disengaged with the Greatest Hits/ Victory Lap tone, before the film ends suddenly with the news that all his dancers left.

  • Ultimately we were left unconvinced that Cunningham (the dancer) was all that interesting. Fashionable certainly, he's attached to the right people, and I'm sure it would be great to be dancing as him, but the just-over-half-full prime-time-at-the-festival cinema was an endless circuit of yawns.

  • Nevertheless we feel cultured now.

Me: sees gay guy wearing every colour of the rainbow for a week also me: subscribes. Love this so much one of mi favorite Gospel song ever. if your reading this text please pray for me. The blue lighting on the stage reminds me of peeing my pants in first grade and feeling cold and ashamed. That exact blue! So weird how colors affect us. 1 win & 6 nominations. See more awards  » Edit Storyline Even for those who know little about dance, Merce Cunningham is a recognizable name - an iconic figure in his field. His mid-20th century collaborations with composer John Cage (his lifelong partner) and visual artist Robert Rauschenberg were central to an era of transformation. Cunningham resisted "avant-garde" or any other label. "I don't describe it. I do it. he once said. Now, with Cunningham, we have a chance to experience what he did. Filmmaker Alla Kovgan assembles the last generation of Cunningham dancers (led by Merce Cunningham Dance Company assistant director of choreography Jennifer Goggans) to present landmark works from the Cunningham repertoire. The film concentrates on the three decades from 1942 to 1972 when Cunningham was making his reputation. Gorgeously shot in 3D, Cunningham brings us closer to these works than any audience has ever been before. Taking an inventive approach with locations, the film places dancers in evocative backdrops such as a tunnel, a... Written by Toronto International Film Festival Plot Summary, Add Synopsis Taglines: One choreographer defined 20th century modern dance. See more  » Details Release Date: 13 December 2019 (USA) Box Office Opening Weekend USA: 18, 422, 15 December 2019 Cumulative Worldwide Gross: 211, 175 See more on IMDbPro  » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs  ».

Question, why does the starbucks have to be a drive-thru.

WOW. I dig this Rosalie. Kicks ass and has all that is you in it

Welcome to Stillwater. That bear is a cherry on the top. One of the best to ever do it. Eagle forever. When Jordan said jordan Cunningham My sister said is his name cummingham i.

Hit me with those cheekbones✊🏼

GOD IS GOOD❤. 🎶💤🎵 Lord Jesus I Love you 🎶💤🎶🙏❤️🙏 Beautiful song🙏❤️🙏 I love love love ❤️🙏. Brilliant! What a find. That intro FANTASTIC It literally almost hoteled my trivago. I look pale. Diggin the Wes Anderson credits at the beginning. Cunningham home Synopsis Merce Cunningham Gallery Creative team Producing team Press Festivals Subscribe LONDON.

Tears of great joy I feel u Phillips so keep on sh your tears. What a mighty God he is we can just take all our burden and troubles and leave them with God and it is taken care of. What a God, I thank you God. This site is a stake in the ground for community I have read that we are “the most connected generation to ever live. ” And I get that. I recently got 11 very important notifications that people *liked* the photo I posted of my dog. So connection? Check. Yet still, on any given day, I can smush into an elevator and stand there with 10 strangers–socially limp, eyes glazed over, staring into our phones. Our children, off at school, think we have 2, 392 friends each because Instagram says so, yet we dont even make eye contact with the person standing right next to us. I dont know about you, but a tiny voice inside me suggests that maybe weve gone off the rails a bit. Filling every moment with noise and screens, yet still sometimes feeling isolated and  alone. I wonder if there is “more” to be had, if were missing out on the kind of deep, rich connections God intended humans to experience. These observations led me to interview hundreds of people about their social experiences. And to start collecting “best practices”–habits that socially “healthy” people use to meaningfully connect with those around them. My hope is this website will become a space to come and connect and explore these learnings. To take a deep breath, figure out what were missing, and remember what its like to live and be…together.

This is just amazing. “Precious” Jordan 2020. Nick Allen December 13, 2019 2019 has seen many great documentaries, across the various styles in which to tell a true story. But theres been nothing quite like Alla Kovgan s “Cunningham, ” an exhilarating testament to documentaries as a boundless form of art. A celebration of New York choreographer Merce Cunningham, the film dreams beyond restrictions many visual storytellers seemingly adhere to. As its narrative tells brief bits about Cunningham's life, and puts his other-worldly dance routines center stage while accompanied by flourishes from 20th century avant-garde music, “Cunningham” honors the tools of filmmaking—sound, action, dialogue—with the harmonious blending of three art forms: music, dance, poetry. Advertisement The first words heard from Cunningham are essential to understanding his art, but also to enjoying Kovgans film. “I never was interested in dancing that referred to a mood or or a feeling, or in a sense expressed the music. the dancing does not refer, it is what it is. Its that whole visual experience. ” That statement provides a path that most art doesn't: Dont interpret. Just watch. Its an inviting, liberating, intoxicating mindset, and perfect for a movie whose immense pleasure comes from beholding continually inspired creativity, simultaneously from an intentional debut director and an instinctual renowned choreographer.  In lieu of a typical structure, Kovgan presents Cunningham's life as like a string of performances, in which we sometimes get to see footage of him doing one (sometimes with close-ups of his massive feet) as matched with a modern dancer (more specifically, a member of the last Cunningham group. The performances are shown chronologically, and span his work from 1942 to 1972 (Cunningham created until 2009, the year he died at age 90.   While it is most concerned with the philosophy behind his dances, Kovgan's editing does create some narrative, with audio snippets of students talking about studying with Cunningham, and later forming a troupe that went on tour in 1964 for an international tour in Europe and Asia (where their audiences werent always pleased. A decent chunk of the story focus also concerns his relationship with avant-garde composer John Cage, and reflections from students about getting onto Cunningham's wavelength of instinctual movements that come with no explanation. You could accuse Kovgan's film of not having enough connective tissue between some of these story elements, but "Cunningham" never wants to be fulfilling as simply a biography to begin with.  The film touches upon some of Cunningham's most famous collaborations, like with the cathartic cacophony of Cages music, the pop art of Robert Rauschenberg, or Andy Warhol s silver clouds, the metallic balloons shaped like pillows. There are plenty of collaborators that arent even mentioned (Brian Eno, Radiohead, Roy Lichtenstein) same goes with the accomplishments and awards Cunningham received. But an emphasis on history is not missed; his work speaks beautifully on its own. In Kovgans hands, even archive practice footage feels worthy of a museum.  “Cunningham” actively considers the past and present—audio interviews of Cunningham talking about his approach plays over modern-day footage of dancers enacting the philosophies of his words. The routines are the film's true focus, as with one of the first we see: a large empty space with windows for natural light to paint the floor; dancers in pastel-colored leotards are observed by a steady camera that gently goes back and forth with them. The dancers have a precise flow, and the ease of their full-body expressions is just one eye-popping element. Aside from hearing Cunninghams words (about his interest in “extending movement possibilities” by mixing dance and modern ballet) moments of silence are filled in by a near-meditative sound of feet landing and swiping across the floor. Each aesthetic piece at play demands attention, and it makes for an addictive spectacle.  Other routines that follow contain more sounds, more props, more movie. Cunninghams “RainForest” from 1968, and accompanied by the experimental squeaks by David Tudor, has three dancers in nude-colored, torn tights kicking around Warhols silver clouds, all along a reflective floor. In its preservation of his work, Cunningham" offers one impressive staging after the next, like a piece that has dancers in the woods, or a rooftop at night. Meanwhile, Kovgan's camera becomes its own force, sometimes looking down on the dancers, running side to side with them, or putting its focus on their surroundings.  Astonishingly, this is Kovgans first feature project, and yet her way of presenting her surplus of footage, photos, and letters is far beyond many of her peers. Many filmmakers would cut from one clip to the next, but Kovgan dares to often put her footage side by side, slightly overlap them like photos dropped on a table, or move the clip itself across the screen. The information of "Cunningham" is always in motion, in defiance of docs that seem to start and stop with each talking head. A similar kinetic effect occurs when archive footage is shown as a smaller box with a larger, defining photo of Cunningham in the background—like watching a video with your computers desktop visible in the background, but the two boxes orchestrate a grandiose sense of character with a full, striking image (Kovgan's approach is more like the 21st century storytelling in an " Unfriended " movie than a typical doc. Kovgan proves exceptional at making an audience understand a subject through unconventional filmmaking, just like Cunningham was clearly gifted at filling a stage with ideas, without having to say what it all means. Reveal Comments comments powered by.

Love the Jeffree and Shane references ! 😂.

0:29 When I heard the out of tune guitar, I lost it 😂😂😂😂

Q&As with Alla Kovgan at the 1:30pm & 4pm screenings on Saturday, January 25. Final day of screenings! One of the most visionary choreographers of the 20th century, Merce Cunningham could also be counted among its great modern artists, part of a coterie of important experimenters across media that included Robert Rauschenberg, Brian Eno, Jasper Johns, and his long-term romantic partner John Cage. This painstakingly constructed new documentary both charts his artistic evolution over the course of three decades and immerses the viewer in the precise rhythms and dynamic movements of his choreography through a 3D process that allows us to step inside the dance. Director Alla Kovgan has created a visceral experience that both reimagines and pays tribute to Cunninghams groundbreaking technique. A Magnolia Pictures release. An NYFF57 selection. All screenings are presented in 3D! Standard pricing. Closed captions available with our capti-view devices.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search Cunningham is a surname of Scottish origin, see Clan Cunningham. Notable people sharing this surname [ edit] A–C [ edit] Aaron Cunningham (born 1986) American baseball player Abe Cunningham, American drummer Alan Cunningham, British Second World War general Alexander Cunningham (1814–1893) British archaeologist, father of the Archaeological Survey of India Alexander Cunningham, 1st Earl of Glencairn (1426–1488) a Scottish nobleman Alexander Cunningham, 5th Earl of Glencairn (died 1574) a Scottish nobleman and covenanter Alfred Austell Cunningham, aviation pioneer Allan Cunningham (disambiguation) or Allen Cunningham, several people Andrew Cunningham, 1st Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope, British Second World War admiral Andrew Cunningham (disambiguation) or Andy Cunningham, several people Archibald Cunningham (1879–1915) Scottish footballer Bertram Cunningham, British Anglican priest and academic Bill Cunningham (disambiguation) several people Bill Cunningham (talk show host) American radio talk show host Billy Cunningham, American basketball player and coach Birgit Cunningham, Anglo-American activist Bob Cunningham (disambiguation) several people Briggs Cunningham, American racing driver and team owner, sports car designer and manufacturer Brysson Cunningham, Scottish harbour engineer and author on dock and harbour engineering and operation Cal Cunningham (born 1973) Democratic state senator in North Carolina Charles Cunningham (disambiguation) several people, including: Charles Cunningham, Royal Navy admiral Charles Milton Cunningham, American newspaper editor and politician Chris Cunningham, British director and video artist Clare Cunningham (athlete) British athlete Claire Cunningham, British choreographer Colin Cunningham (swimmer) British swimmer D–J [ edit] Daniel John Cunningham, Scottish anatomist Darryl Cunningham, English cartoonist David Cunningham (disambiguation) several people David Loren Cunningham, film producer Dominick Cunningham (born 1995) British artistic gymnast Ebenezer Cunningham, British mathematician Edward Francis Cunningham, Scottish painter Edwin Cunningham (disambiguation) several people Elaine Cunningham, American fantasy and science-fiction author Elmer T. Cunningham, American entrepreneur and businessman, specializing in vacuum tubes and radio manufacturing E. V. Cunningham, pseudonym of Howard Fast, an American writer Francis Cunningham (painter) Gary Cunningham (born 1940/1941) American basketball coach and athletic director Gina Cunningham (born 1955) American multidisciplinary artist Glenn Cunningham (disambiguation) several people Graeme Cunningham (cricketer) Australian Cricketer Graeme Cunningham (Scottish footballer) Scottish footballer Hugh Cunningham, former British Army officer Imogen Cunningham (1883–1976) American photographer J. Cunningham, American poet Jack Cunningham, Baron Cunningham of Felling (born 1939) British politician James Cunningham (disambiguation) several people, including: James Cunningham (director) New Zealand film director James Cunningham, 7th Earl of Glencairn, Scottish peer and member of the Privy Council of Scotland James Cunningham, 14th Earl of Glencairn, Scottish nobleman James Cunningham (Canadian politician) 1834–1925) former member of the Canadian House of Commons from British Columbia James B. Cunningham, American diplomat, formerly the acting US ambassador to the UN James Cunningham (Australian politician) Australian politician and President of the Senate Jason D. Cunningham, US Air Force pararescue medic Jason Cunningham, English boxer Jean Wooden Cunningham, American politician and lawyer Jeff Cunningham, American association football player Jim Cunningham (politician) born 1941) Labour MP in the United Kingdom Jim Cunningham (ice hockey) born 1956) ice hockey player in the National Hockey League Jim Cunningham (American football) former NFL running back for the Washington Redskins Jimmy Cunningham, former return specialist and wide receiver in the Canadian Football League and the XFL John Cunningham (officer) Anglo-Irish soldier of the 17th century John Cunningham (VC 1916) East Yorkshire Regiment John Cunningham (VC 1917) Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment John Cunningham (RAF officer) RAF night fighter ace (known as Cat's Eyes Cunningham) John Cunningham (Royal Navy officer) British Second World War admiral; First Sea Lord John W. Cunningham, author of Western novels and stories Johnny Cunningham, 1957–2003) Scottish folk musician K–Z [ edit] Keiron Cunningham, British rugby league player Kenny Cunningham, Irish footballer Korey Cunningham, American football player Kristan Cunningham, American interior designer and television personality Larry Cunningham (1938–2012) Irish country music singer Larry Cunningham (1951–2019) American R&B singer, member of the vocal group The Floaters Laurie Cunningham, English former footballer Leland Cunningham, American astronomer and electronic computing authority Liam Cunningham, an Irish actor Loren Cunningham, American-born missions statesman and founder of Youth With A Mission Marta Cunningham (1869–1937) American-born European-based soprano-singer and philanthropist Melvin Cunningham (born 1973) American football player Merce Cunningham (1919–2009) American choreographer Michael Cunningham, award-winning American novelist, author of The Hours Michael R. Cunningham, Chancellor National University System Milton Joseph Cunningham, American politician Myrna Cunningham, Miskita feminist and indigenous rights activist from Nicaragua Owen Cunningham, Australian rugby league footballer Patrick Cunningham (1878–1960) Irish politician Phil Cunningham (folk musician) Scottish accordionist with the folk group Silly Wizard Phil Cunningham (rock musician) English musician Randall Duke Cunningham, U. S. Representative from California Randall Cunningham, American football player Redmond Cunningham, Irish officer in the British Army Richie Cunningham (American football) born 1970) American football placekicker Robert Cunningham (disambiguation) any of several people Ross Cunningham, Scottish footballer Scott Cunningham, writer Sean S. Cunningham, film producer and director Sederrik Cunningham, American football player Sophie Cunningham (born 1963) Australian writer and editor Sophie Cunningham (basketball) born 1996) American basketball player Stacey Cunningham, 67th President of the New York Stock Exchange Sumner Archibald Cunningham (1843–1913) American Confederate veteran and newspaper editor Tony Cunningham (footballer) Jamaican former footballer Walter Cunningham, astronaut Wade Cunningham, New Zealand racing driver Ward Cunningham, founder of the first wiki William Cunningham (disambiguation) W. Peyton Cunningham, American lawyer and state legislator Zach Cunningham (born 1994) American football player Notable fictional characters sharing this surname [ edit] Max Cunningham, character from Hollyoaks Howard Cunningham, character from Happy Days Joanie Cunningham, character from Happy Days Marion Cunningham, character from Happy Days Richie Cunningham, character from Happy Days Tom Cunningham, character from Hollyoaks The Cunningham family in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Mr and Alec Cunningham in the Sherlock Holmes story " The Adventure of the Reigate Squire.

Robot: I know your name! Jordan: hey its thirty minutes later whats my name? Robot: I dont know you didnt tell me idiot Jordan: b* I told you my name thirty minutes ago. This is my home on the web. You can find all of my articles on my article list page, starting with the most recent. The first three characters of the domain name are my initials. Im a nobody. Well, actually… Im a retired veteran, a retired American veteran. I served for 20 years and Ive been retired from the service for more than 20 years. Im a permanent resident of Olongapo City, Philippines but I still sometimes live in the United States. My retirement story explains it. My full name is “Richard Timothy Cunningham”, but I shorten it to “RT Cunningham” when and where I can. Some people even call me “RT”. I started shortening it when I was at my first Marine Corps duty station and I used it as an official alias until I retired from the military. Ive had many nicknames over the years, many I dont care to repeat (and many I cant. Very few people call me “Richard”, and most Filipinos mispronounce it anyway (including my close relatives. Creative Writing I spend as much time as I can writing about whatever it is Im thinking about on any given day. That is, when Im actually writing. When I started writing way back in the 1990s, I was writing something somewhere every day of the week. Now, I can skip days and weeks at a time. Regardless of what subject I write about, I try to write as clearly and concisely as I possibly can. Even though I have quite a few college courses under my belt, I dont have a degree in anything. Although this is a personal website, I try not to write about personal issues. Since Olongapo is my retirement home, I sometimes write about either the city or the country. Influences Way back in the 1980s, I cut my programming teeth (BASIC and Assembly Language) on a Commodore computer. I hacked some software and ran a bulletin board service on another Commodore computer from 1992 to 1998. My programming hobby began sometime in the middle of my military career and continues to this day. One of the jobs I had after the military dealt with UNIX servers for telemarketing and collections. While my hobby helped me reach a management position, I didnt enjoy the work I was doing. I now have my own virtual server, where this website resides, and I configure everything on my own. I write about my programming adventures when I feel like the information will benefit someone.

See the History Merce Cunningham pushed the boundaries of dance and art throughout his life. Cunningham's Timeline Engage with Us Lyon Opera Ballet in Summerspace. Photo by Jaime Roque de la Cruz 2012 License a Work The Cunningham Trust stages Cunningham's choreography for professional and student dancers around the globe. Licensing opportunities Cunningham Technique Class. Photo by Ian Douglas 2014 Take a Class The Cunningham Trust offers a daily class in Cunningham Technique. Learn more Merce Cunningham Dance Company in Assemblage. Photo by James Klosty 1968 Contact Us Have a question or request? Contact us.

 

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