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Penelope Andrew
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Penelope Andrew is a writer and editor with a special interest in film, culture, the arts and social justice issues. She is a member of the Women Film Critics Circle, and a certified psychoanalytic psychotherapist with a private practice in New York City.

Her work has appeared in The Huffington Post, WBAI.org, Critical Women on Film, Universal Press Syndicate, Hellenic Voice, and New Manhattan Review. She is active in The SaveDarfur Coalition and a member of The Phi Beta Kappa Society, Amnesty International, The Film Forum, and The American Association for Psychoanalysis/CSW. She is also a Fellow of the NYSSCSW.

A former reporter and associate editor of H Proini (a Greek-American daily newspaper), she also served as editor of the newsletter for The Association on American Indian Affairs. She was an Adjunct Lecturer/Field Instructor for Columbia University's GSSW from 1999 to 2001.

Ms. Andrew is a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Brandeis University and completed a certification program of study at The Psychoanalytic Training Institute of NYCC in New York City. She is also a film school dropout having studied film theory, history and criticism at The New School for Social Research.

She can be reached at PeneAndrew@aol.com.

Blog Entries by Penelope Andrew

First Choice for Lolita, Hayley Mills, Attends Rare Screening of Whistle Down the Wind in Hollywood, Cult Classic Comes to BAM

Posted June 21, 2011 | 02:19 PM (EST)


Film buffs who missed the 2011 TCM Classic Film Festival's rare screening and discussion of director Bryan Forbes' (The L-Shaped Room) first film, Whistle Down the Wind (1961) on May 1st, which took place at the Chinese Multiplex on Hollywood Boulevard, will have a chance to see...

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!W.A.R.: Fighting the Politics of Exclusion by Documenting a History of Women's Art (and Much More)

6 Comments | Posted May 31, 2011 | 04:24 PM (EST)

Lynn Hershman Leeson's sweeping new documentary, !Women Art Revolution (!WAR), reaches beyond the boundaries of cinema thanks to its "links" to new technology and new media, as well as its collaborations with educational institutions, artists, scholars, and social media architects. In 83 minutes, the director, who is also the writer...

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A Festival to Remember: TCM's Opening Night

4 Comments | Posted May 5, 2011 | 06:05 PM (EST)

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Leslie Caron walks the red carpet to the 60th-anniversary screening of An American in Paris, which opened the TCM Film Festival on April 28. Photo: Jordan Strauss, 2011 WireImage.


The evening began auspiciously with Leslie Caron walking the red carpet to Grauman's...

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HuffPost Review: Oscar-Winner In a Better World, and Remembering Elizabeth Taylor

Posted March 30, 2011 | 11:36 AM (EST)

In In a Better World, Danish director Susanne Bier has the audacity to enter places where madness and inhumanity flourish. She looks at this world squarely as one world, and allows her actors to succeed in making sense of it. They forge ahead full speed even when the narrative feels...

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Gay Icons and American Dreams in New Documentary: Making the Boys

Posted March 9, 2011 | 12:07 PM (EST)

Off Broadway, Hollywood and American Dreams in Making the Boys: All About The Boys in the Band

Director Crayton Robey's ambitious new documentary Making the Boys, about The Boys in the Band -- both the play (1968) and the film (1970) -- chronicles the life, times and resonance of a...

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Awards Season & Second Looks: What Ever Happened to Mother & Child? Winter's Bone Miracles & The African Queen Restored

Posted February 7, 2011 | 10:19 AM (EST)

While there were no surprises regarding Screen Actors Guild wins for best male lead actor, Colin Firth (The King's Speech), and supporting actor, Christian Bale (The Fighter), it was refreshing to see Melissa Leo (The Fighter) snag the best supporting actress award and disappointing to witness Natalie Portman's (The Black...

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The Freud(ian)s: Inspired by Sigmund's Passion for Antiquities, Jane Debuts Her Own Paradigms of the Unconscious

Posted January 18, 2011 | 03:32 PM (EST)

British sculptor and multimedia conceptual artist Jane McAdam Freud continues to excavate deep within the bowels of humanity. In her first solo exhibit in New York City, Random Plus, she creates visual paradigms that shed light not only on crucial transgenerational bonds (in her own family and in ours), but...

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Cinematic Enchantment via Lubitsch & Chomet: Cluny Brown Revived at Film Forum, The Illusionist Debuts in NY/LA

Posted December 27, 2010 | 02:30 PM (EST)

A rare screening of the Ernst Lubitsch masterpiece--and last completed film--Cluny Brown (1946) opened on Christmas Eve at The Film Forum for one week, while the new animated feature The Illusionist directed by Sylvain Chomet (The Triplets of Belleville) adapted from an original script by the late Jacques Tati (Mon...

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Made in Dagenham: Union Spirit, Winning Performances

Posted November 19, 2010 | 01:54 PM (EST)

I am partial to British films with ensemble casts tapped from UK's dazzling pool of film, theater, and BBC television talent with a Yank or two thrown in. In the Loop, An Education, and Four Weddings and A Funeral are a few examples. With a cast that boasts Sally Hawkins...

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Bisset, De Havilland & Kerr Feted by French Legion & BFI/TCM Festival to Open With Caron Classic

Posted November 10, 2010 | 03:14 PM (EST)

As late summer transformed into autumn, milestones in classic film, which focused primarily on iconic leading ladies, dominated the news and will be remembered as bittersweet. Some of international cinema's most important figures such as Patricia Neal, Claude Chabrol, Arthur Penn, Tony Curtis, and Jill Clayburgh passed away, while others...

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The Remarkable Life and Career of Patricia Neal

Posted August 11, 2010 | 05:38 PM (EST)

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What sets artists apart from stars and competent actors is originality and authenticity. Patricia Neal had these and other rare qualities in spades. Like some of her contemporaries who achieved greatness, she rose above mediocre or even bad material and delivered performances...

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Mother & Child, Winter's Bone, Solitary Man Feature Sumptuous Performances, Women Without Men Stunning Visuals & History Lessons

Posted May 18, 2010 | 11:38 AM (EST)

Fascinating roles for women marked with dazzling performances by Annette Bening, Naomi Watts, Kerry Washington (Mother & Child), Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone), and their supporting casts converge in two new films. Michael Douglas gives a gripping performance in Solitary Man rivaling his work in the sleeper Wonder Boys, while art...

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Haskell Captures the Dynamics Underlying an American Icon in Frankly, My Dear: Gone with the Wind Revisited

Posted May 17, 2010 | 01:10 PM (EST)

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Film scholar Molly Haskell could not have been a more perfect choice for Yale University Press to tap for another volume in its Icons of America series that explicates the phenomenon -- both novel and film -- of Gone with the Wind....

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Mankiewicz Biographer Kenneth Geist on All About Eve (Is Joe)

Posted April 26, 2010 | 11:25 AM (EST)

This is Part II of an article on All About Eve featuring highlights of a recent interview with film scholar and National Board of Review member Kenneth L. Geist. Eve kicked off TCM's Classic Film Festival in NYC. The festival continues in L.A. from April 22 through 25.

Like Casablanca...

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Anthony Hopkins and Laura Linney Star in James Ivory's The City of Your Final Destination

Posted April 20, 2010 | 11:28 AM (EST)

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How is a naive, doctoral candidate in literature, Omar Razaghi (Omar Metwally), expected to persuade the odd-ball yet formidable heirs of a recently deceased, Uruguayan novelist, Jules Gund, to grant "unanimous authorization" to write his biography, which is required to fulfill a...

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TCM Classic Film Fest Debuts in NYC With Mankiewicz's All About Eve at the Ziegfeld

Posted March 31, 2010 | 01:23 PM (EST)

This is Part I of an article on Turner Classic Movies' film festival with a focus on "All About Eve." In Part II, this film classic will be explored further with commentary by the director's biographer, Kenneth L. Geist, author of Pictures Will Talk: The Life & Films of Joseph...

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All About Her Mother: Cindy Kleine's Phyllis and Harold & Actress Jean Simmons: Leading Lady in Her Final Film

Posted February 19, 2010 | 04:09 PM (EST)

To say that director Cindy Kleine spins her search for truth into an art form only begins to describe the new film, Phyllis and Harold, documenting the bewildering marriage of her parents. While father Harold remains a dark and shadowy figure, mother Phyllis is eventually painstakingly and fully fleshed out....

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Remembering Jennifer Jones and A Perfect Afternoon at the Movies

Posted January 8, 2010 | 02:23 PM (EST)

Like other film lovers of my generation, I was not yet born when Phylis Isley began her auspicious acting career during America's post-WWII boom. With no revival houses in the small Virginia town in which I grew up, I first saw the films of the luminous actress whom...

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NYC Psychoanalytic Society Hosts Artist Jane McAdam Freud: The Edge of Analysis, Art and Politics

Posted November 17, 2009 | 10:31 AM (EST)

Situated among the countless arts organizations in New York City are enclaves of passionate culture hounds who gather under the auspices of psychoanalytic training institutes. "There are approximately 38 (such institutes) in Manhattan alone," notes Alan Grossman, LCSW, director of the NY Counseling Center's Training Institute. Joan Erdheim, PhD, President...

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Adolescent Anarchy & Rebellion in England: St. Trinian's & An Education

Posted October 22, 2009 | 05:08 PM (EST)

Neither St. Trinian's nor An Education (to a lesser extent) has been a total darling of American critics, but each film celebrates the rebellion and anarchy of adolescence, which is a rite of passage in almost every culture.

St. Trinian's is to the U.K. what Rocky Horror Picture...

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