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The Successful Screenwriter with Geoffrey D Calhoun: Screenwriting Podcast
Geoffrey discusses with Irish filmmaker Maureen O'Connel what it takes to make a quality and professional film with no budget.Visit and submit to the Dublin International Comedy Film Festival at https://www.dublininternationalcomedyfilmfest.com/
Maureen O'Connell is a professional actor and filmmaker from Dublin, Ireland. She trained as an actor at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London and received her BA in Acting in 2012. She also has a Higher National Diploma in Film Production from Ballyfermot College, Dublin. She has co-written, acted in and directed the comedy feature Spa Weekend and is the director of the Dublin International Comedy Film Festival on the 3rd and 4th December www.dublininternationalcomedyfilmfestival.com (http://www.dublininternationalcomedyfilmfestival.com/)
Preaching for the 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Maureen O'Connell offers a reflection on resisting the thinking, habits, and solutions of empire: "We aren’t chosen by the authority figures of empires, no matter what religious or political guises they moralize with or campaign in or what certainties they claim to offer or platitudes they attempt to ply us with. We are chosen by God. And the God who chooses us has a dream for us—the individual us and the collective us—that surpasses the imagination of empire." Maureen H. O’Connell is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Religion and Theology at LaSalle University. She authored Compassion: Loving Our Neighbor in an Age of Globalization (Orbis Books, 2009) and If These Walls Could Talk: Community Muralism and the Beauty of Justice (The Liturgical Press, 2012). She is a member of POWER (Philadelphians Organizing to Witness, Empower, and Rebuild), an interfaith coalition of more than 50 congregations committed to making Philadelphia the city of “just love” through faith-based community organizing. Visit www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/10182020 to learn more about Maureen, to read her preaching text, and for more preaching from Catholic women.
RCP team member Lisa Zambetti talks with Maureen O'Connell, retired FBI agent from the Los Angeles field office. The two discuss Maureen's training and start in the bureau and several of the cases that made the biggest impact on her and in some cases still haunt her. Visit Maureen at her website.This episode of Real Crime Profile is brought to you by Quip.Visit GetQuip.com/RealCrime and get their first refill for free.And also by SimpliSafeGo to SimpliSafe.com/RealCrimeGet $100 off the Summer Package. Sale ends July 31, 2018
A man stabbed to death on federal land seems a clear case of murder but was it really?Subscribe today so you don't miss an episode: http://www.wondery.com/shows/bestcaseworstcase.We want to get to know you better! Help us out and support the show by going to wondery.com/survey and filling it out.
A man stabbed to death on federal land seems to represent a clear case of murder, but was it really?Subscribe today so you don't miss an episode: http://www.wondery.com/shows/bestcaseworstcase.
In this episode of The Actors' Room, Lynn Larkin is joined by Maureen O'Connell. Maureen has a Higher National Diploma in Film Production from Ballyfermot College & a BA in Acting from RADA, London. Maureen has over 10 years experience as an actor & filmmaker. She has many theatre and tv credits to her name, most notably, 'Mary' in Juno & the Paycock alongside Niamh Cusack, and 'Oonagh' in BBC 1's Father Brown alongside Mark Williams and James Fleet. She has written and directed 3 short films, the most recent of which Proclaim! has just won the Best 1916 Centenary Short Film Award at Fingal Film Festival and Best Script at the Dublin International Short Film & Music Festival. Maureen also teaches Acting at Filmbase. Maureen is currently directing her first feature film. Links: www.proclaimfilm.com www.maureenoconnell.weebly.com www.3hotwhiskeys.weebly.com http://filmireland.net/
Maureen O'Connell, associate professor and chair of religion at LaSalle University, explores the community muralism movement in Philadelphia through the lens of racial justice. Over three decades, the movement has yielded 3,500 murals across the city. She highlights the collaborative process used to create the murals, often including minority communities and even prisoners, and explores how the murals tell stories that break down boundaries of racial inequality.
We visit the murals of Philadelphia with theologian Maureen O'Connell, and Lincoln monuments around the country with James Percoco--his book, "Summers with Lincoln", is out from Fordham University Press.