Frances Sternhagen, the legendary Broadway actress who won two Tony Awards, was nominated for another five and achieved lasting and widespread recognition for her comedically stern portrayal of Esther Clavin, the demanding mother of insufferable postman Cliff Claven on Cheers, died Nov. 27 of natural causes. She was 93.
Her death was announced by her son, the actor John Carlin, on Instagram.
“Frannie. Mom. Frances Sternhagen. On Monday night, Nov 27, she died peacefully at her home, a month and a half shy of her 94th birthday,” Carlin wrote today, ending the tribute with “Fly on, Frannie. The curtain goes down on a life so richly, passionately, humbly and generously lived.”
See Carlin’s Instagram post below.
Sternhagen, one of the New York stage’s most celebrated and beloved stars, gave indelible performances in productions including the 1972 production of The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, Equus in 1975, Angel in 1978, On Golden Pond in 1979 and,...
Her death was announced by her son, the actor John Carlin, on Instagram.
“Frannie. Mom. Frances Sternhagen. On Monday night, Nov 27, she died peacefully at her home, a month and a half shy of her 94th birthday,” Carlin wrote today, ending the tribute with “Fly on, Frannie. The curtain goes down on a life so richly, passionately, humbly and generously lived.”
See Carlin’s Instagram post below.
Sternhagen, one of the New York stage’s most celebrated and beloved stars, gave indelible performances in productions including the 1972 production of The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, Equus in 1975, Angel in 1978, On Golden Pond in 1979 and,...
- 11/29/2023
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
André Bishop will conclude his 33-year leadership tenure at Lincoln Center Theater in June 2025 at the conclusion of the non-profit theater company’s 40th anniversary 2024-25 season.
Bishop, whose celebrated tenure as Lct’s Artistic Director and more recently Producing Artistic Director included the premieres of such acclaimed new works as Tom Stoppard’s The Coast of Utopia and Arcadia, Christopher Durang’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Wendy Wasserstein’s The Sisters Rosensweig, and The Light in the Piazza by Craig Lucas and Adam Guettel, to name a very few, announced his intended departure today.
“My years at Lincoln Center Theater have been happy ones,” he said in a statement, “and I will miss working with all my friends and colleagues. But the time has come, as it inevitably does, for the next generation to step in and step up. I look forward to that. Lct has...
Bishop, whose celebrated tenure as Lct’s Artistic Director and more recently Producing Artistic Director included the premieres of such acclaimed new works as Tom Stoppard’s The Coast of Utopia and Arcadia, Christopher Durang’s Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, Wendy Wasserstein’s The Sisters Rosensweig, and The Light in the Piazza by Craig Lucas and Adam Guettel, to name a very few, announced his intended departure today.
“My years at Lincoln Center Theater have been happy ones,” he said in a statement, “and I will miss working with all my friends and colleagues. But the time has come, as it inevitably does, for the next generation to step in and step up. I look forward to that. Lct has...
- 9/22/2023
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
This expensive production was dismissed as a flop, and literary critics scorned it for diluting the famed novel by Theodore Dreiser. But it plays well now: William Wyler gives star Laurence Olivier what may be his best film acting role ever. Jennifer Jones’ title part suffers from script changes that censor and sentimentalize Dreiser’s intentions, but the film remains a shattering tragedy. Eddie Albert co-stars in one of his first dramatic roles; this encoding includes a scene dropped from the original release.
Carrie (1952)
Region Free Blu-ray
Viavision [Imprint] #200
1952 / B&w / 1:37 Academy / 121, 118 min. / Street Date February 22, 2023 / Available from [Imprint] / Aud 34.95
Starring: Laurence Olivier, Jennifer Jones, Miriam Hopkins, Eddie Albert, Basil Ruysdael, Ray Teal, Barry Kelley, William Reynolds, Mary Murphy, Charles Halton, William Baldwin, Dorothy Adams, Jacqueline de Witt, Don Beddoe, Royal Dano, Margaret Field.
Cinematography: Victor Milner
Art Directors: Hal Pereira, Roland Anderson
Costume Design: Edith Head
Film Editor: Robert Swink...
Carrie (1952)
Region Free Blu-ray
Viavision [Imprint] #200
1952 / B&w / 1:37 Academy / 121, 118 min. / Street Date February 22, 2023 / Available from [Imprint] / Aud 34.95
Starring: Laurence Olivier, Jennifer Jones, Miriam Hopkins, Eddie Albert, Basil Ruysdael, Ray Teal, Barry Kelley, William Reynolds, Mary Murphy, Charles Halton, William Baldwin, Dorothy Adams, Jacqueline de Witt, Don Beddoe, Royal Dano, Margaret Field.
Cinematography: Victor Milner
Art Directors: Hal Pereira, Roland Anderson
Costume Design: Edith Head
Film Editor: Robert Swink...
- 2/18/2023
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Stars: Olivia de Havilland, Montgomery Clift, Ralph Richardson, Miriam Hopkins | Written by Ruth Goetz, Augustus Goetz | Directed by William Wyler
Ruth and Augustus Goetz adapted their own stage play (itself based on a 19thcentury Henry James novel) for this 1949 melodrama. Directed by William Wyler, just before his mega-budget 1950s period, it’s a small-scale play with big ideas. Like many films of the period, the setting is the high society of New York, except this time the period is the mid-19th century.
Catherine Sloper (Olivia de Havilland) is an enigma. She carries herself with a boyish energy and disarming shyness, more interested in her embroidery than socialising. Socialising in this context means trying to bag a husband, of course. Catherine’s reclusiveness is more of an unwillingness to “present” herself in the cattle market of the upper social echelons. Then she meets the lithe, charming and persuasive Morris Townsend...
Ruth and Augustus Goetz adapted their own stage play (itself based on a 19thcentury Henry James novel) for this 1949 melodrama. Directed by William Wyler, just before his mega-budget 1950s period, it’s a small-scale play with big ideas. Like many films of the period, the setting is the high society of New York, except this time the period is the mid-19th century.
Catherine Sloper (Olivia de Havilland) is an enigma. She carries herself with a boyish energy and disarming shyness, more interested in her embroidery than socialising. Socialising in this context means trying to bag a husband, of course. Catherine’s reclusiveness is more of an unwillingness to “present” herself in the cattle market of the upper social echelons. Then she meets the lithe, charming and persuasive Morris Townsend...
- 6/18/2019
- by Rupert Harvey
- Nerdly
Directed by William Wyler in 1949, The Heiress is an adaptation of Henry James’ "Washington Square." More accurately, Wyler's feature drama is the film version of a stage adaptation, written by Ruth and Augustus Goetz from the James novel. The film stars living Hollywood legend Olivia de Havilland as Catherine Sloper, an awkward woman who lives in a stately mansion in New York's Washington Square with her father, a rich doctor (played by the excellent Ralph Richardson). In this 1880s tale, Catherine is likely at or past the age when she should be married off, and so suitors come calling. One of them in particular is the outrageously handsome Morris Townsend. Morris has everything going...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
- 5/29/2019
- Screen Anarchy
William Wyler and a trio of fantastic actors make indelible movie history from a grim story by Henry James. How much of love is bald opportunism? How many successes married their way into money? And what’s a lovesick woman to do when a beau may not be true? This may be the key Wyler picture, with the strongest ‘staircase’ scene of them all.
The Heiress
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 974
1949 / B&W / 1:37 flat full frame / 116 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date , 2019 / 39.95
Starring: Olivia de Havilland, Montgomery Clift, Ralph Richardson, Miriam Hopkins, Vanessa Brown.
Cinematography: Leo Tover
Film Editor: William Hornbeck
Original Music: Aaron Copland
Written by Ruth and Agustus Goetz from their play, from the book by Henry James
Produced and Directed by William Wyler
One of Hollywood’s finest directors, William Wyler turned out a high percentage of bona fide classics, distinguished adaptations of books and plays.
The Heiress
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 974
1949 / B&W / 1:37 flat full frame / 116 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date , 2019 / 39.95
Starring: Olivia de Havilland, Montgomery Clift, Ralph Richardson, Miriam Hopkins, Vanessa Brown.
Cinematography: Leo Tover
Film Editor: William Hornbeck
Original Music: Aaron Copland
Written by Ruth and Agustus Goetz from their play, from the book by Henry James
Produced and Directed by William Wyler
One of Hollywood’s finest directors, William Wyler turned out a high percentage of bona fide classics, distinguished adaptations of books and plays.
- 4/20/2019
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Teresa Wright and Matt Damon in 'The Rainmaker' Teresa Wright: From Marlon Brando to Matt Damon (See preceding post: "Teresa Wright vs. Samuel Goldwyn: Nasty Falling Out.") "I'd rather have luck than brains!" Teresa Wright was quoted as saying in the early 1950s. That's understandable, considering her post-Samuel Goldwyn choice of movie roles, some of which may have seemed promising on paper.[1] Wright was Marlon Brando's first Hollywood leading lady, but that didn't help her to bounce back following the very public spat with her former boss. After all, The Men was released before Elia Kazan's film version of A Streetcar Named Desire turned Brando into a major international star. Chances are that good film offers were scarce. After Wright's brief 1950 comeback, for the third time in less than a decade she would be gone from the big screen for more than a year.
- 3/11/2015
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
There's unmarriageable and then there's unmarriageable: The Catherine Sloper of Henry James's Washington Square is an 1850s heiress of "plain, dull, gentle countenance" who "devoted her pocket money to the purchase of cream cakes" and is "decidedly not clever." The Catherine Sloper of Ruth and Augustus Goetz's 1947 play The Heiress (which is merely "suggested" by Washington Square) is a bright young thing buried under a bushel of insecurities, crippled by an awkward fashion sense and near-cataleptic social anxiety. (In William Wyler's film version, Olivia de Havilland was slapped with a pair of Mike Dukakis eyebrows to uglify her into premature spinsterhood.)Now comes The Help's Jessica Chastain, the latest slightly nontraditional beauty to play the ostensibly uncomely Catherine: She gets a frizzy wig and a stammer-y, standoffish way with strangers. Is this enough to make her convincingly unappealing in the withering gaze of her father (David Strathairn...
- 11/2/2012
- by Scott Brown
- Vulture
New York – The gasps of pleasure that accompanied the stage entrance of Dan Stevens in The Heiress on press night indicated a large contingent of Downton Abbey fans in the audience. And the actor is a savvy casting choice in a part that requires beguiling charm and sufficient sincerity to keep us wondering about his character’s motives. But the good news doesn’t extend to the actress in the title role of this plush Broadway revival. An underpowered Jessica Chastain, hampered by questionable directorial choices, dilutes the emotional impact of this nonetheless compelling melodrama. Adapted by Ruth & Augustus Goetz
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- 11/2/2012
- by David Rooney
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Opening night is tonight for the new Broadway production of The Heiress. The Heiress stars Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain as Catherine Sloper, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn as Dr. Austin Sloper, the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens as Morris Townsend and Tony Award winner Judith Ivey as Lavinia Penniman. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress is directed by two-time Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman.
- 11/1/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
The new Broadway production of the Tony Award winning play The Heiress stars Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn, the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens, and Tony Award winner Judith Ivey. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress is directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. BroadwayWorld brings you just-released photos of the cast in action below...
- 10/24/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn and the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens lead a new production of the unforgettable drama and Tony Award winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. The Heiress will be produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland.The cast met the press today and you can check out full photo coverage below...
- 9/13/2012
- by Walter McBride
- BroadwayWorld.com
Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn and the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens lead a new production of the unforgettable drama and Tony Award winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. The Heiress will be produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland.The cast met the press today and BroadwayWorld's Richard Ridge was there to chat with the whole team. Check out what they had to say by clicking below...
- 9/13/2012
- by BroadwayWorld TV
- BroadwayWorld.com
Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn and the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens lead a new production of the unforgettable drama and Tony Award winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. The Heiress will be produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland.The cast met the press today and you can check out a photo preview from the festivities below Be sure to check back later for full coverage...
- 9/13/2012
- by Walter McBride
- BroadwayWorld.com
The producers of The Heiress have just announced full casting for the Broadway-bound production that stars Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn, the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens and Tony Award winner Judith Ivey. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. Tickets go on sale to the general public today, August 27.
- 8/27/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Tony Award winner Judith Ivey joins Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain, Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn and the leading man of Downton Abbey Dan Stevens in a new production of the unforgettable drama and Tony Award winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. The Heiress will be produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland.
- 7/9/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Tara Rubin Casting is casting a new Broadway revival of "The Heiress," the enduring 1947 play about a painfully shy woman who longs for her father's affection but is willing to lose everything for love. The play was adapted by Ruth and Augustus Goetz from Henry James' 1880 novel "Washington Square." This production will be directed by Tony nominee Moises Kaufman ("Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo," "33 Variations").The producers announced in January that Jessica Chastain ("The Help," "Tree of Life") will star in the title role as Catherine Sloper, described as a plain-looking spinster who tries to earn her father's respect but rarely succeeds. David Strathairn will play Dr. Austin Sloper, Catherine's protective father who is still mourning his late wife. Dan Stevens ("Downton Abbey") has been cast as Morris Townsend, a handsome and charming young gold-digger who pursues Catherine's affections. Chastain and Stevens are both making their Broadway...
- 5/29/2012
- by help@backstage.com (Daniel Lehman)
- backstage.com
With production on the third season of PBS’ hit Downton Abbey wrapping soon, castmember Dan Stevens is set to play golddigger Morris Townsend in the Broadway revival of Ruth and Augustus Goetz’ play The Heiress this fall, which itself was based on the Henry James novel. Stevens plays Matthew Crawley, who is in line to inherit the grand titular estate in Downton Abbey. He will appear opposite Jessica Chastain, as the heiress herself Catherine Sloper, and David Strathairn as her disapproving father. This marks the Broadway debut for both Chastain and Stevens. The play based on Henry James’ Washington Square is being produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland and directed by Moisés Kaufman. Stevens’ previous stage work, in London, include playing Septimus Hodge in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia and the Doctor in Stoppard and Andre Previn’s Every Good Boy Deserves Favour.
- 5/14/2012
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Dan Stevens just can’t escape the aristocracy. The actor, who is currently starring as heir apparent Matthew Crawley in PBS’s smash soap Downton Abbey, will make his Broadway debut opposite Jessica Chastain and David Strathairn in The Heiress, which will bow at an as-yet-unannounced theatre in October 2012.
Stevens will play Morris Townsend, a charming gold digger who romances a wealthy heiress (Chastain, in her Broadway debut) despite the warnings of her father (Strathairn). The Moisés Kaufman-directed production is the fifth revival of the 1947 play, written by Ruth and Augustus Goetz, which was also adapted into a well-reviewed...
Stevens will play Morris Townsend, a charming gold digger who romances a wealthy heiress (Chastain, in her Broadway debut) despite the warnings of her father (Strathairn). The Moisés Kaufman-directed production is the fifth revival of the 1947 play, written by Ruth and Augustus Goetz, which was also adapted into a well-reviewed...
- 5/14/2012
- by Marc Snetiker
- EW.com - PopWatch
Downton Abbey meets Broadway Bww can report that Dan Stevens, star of the Golden Globe-winning series Downton Abbey, will play the role of Morris Townsend opposite Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain Catherine Sloper and Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn Dr. Austin Sloper in the Tony Award-winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth Goetz amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman. Performances will begin October 2012 at a theatre to be announced.
- 5/14/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Oscar-nominees David Strathairn annd Jessica Chastain will appear together on Broadway: "Written by Ruth Goetz & Augustus Goetz, 'The Heiress' will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moisés Kaufman and will open in the Fall of 2012 at a theatre to be announced ... 'The Heiress' will be produced by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland. This production marks 17 years since the celebrated play was last seen on Broadway. 'The Heiress' is based on the classic Henry James novel Washington Square and became an Academy Award-winning film." Broadway World In the TV marketplace, is it better to be acclaimed or have ratings? "Both 'Two and a Half Men' and 'Mad Men' are considered massively successful shows, but that's about where their similarities end. The former has ratings through the roof, while the latter is critically-acclaimed. It made me wonder -- in a world of seemingly i.
- 3/16/2012
- Gold Derby
Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner David Strathairn Dr. Austin Sloper will join Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain Catherine Sloper in the Tony Award-winning play The Heiress. Written by Ruth Goetz amp Augustus Goetz, The Heiress will be directed by Tony Award nominated playwright and director Moiss Kaufman and will open in the Fall of 2012 at a theatre to be announced.
- 3/15/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
New York -- David Strathairn will return to Broadway in the fall to star opposite Jessica Chastain in The Heiress, the 1947 adaptation by Ruth and Augustus Goetz of the 1880 Henry James novel, Washington Square. Moisés Kaufman (Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo) will direct the revival, which marks the first foray into Broadway producing for film veteran Paula Wagner. Her fellow lead producers on the project are Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland. Strathairn will play Dr. Austin Sloper, the wealthy father of Chastain's character, Catherine Sloper, a plain, socially awkward young woman from whom he withholds affection, blocking what she
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- 3/15/2012
- by David Rooney
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Actress Jessica Chastain is set to make her Broadway debut in an upcoming revival of The Heiress.
Chastain, who is currently nominated for a Golden Globe for her turn in The Help, will hit the stage this autumn.
The actress will portray a shy young woman yearning for her wealthy father's acceptance in the show, which will be directed by Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo veteran Moises Kaufman.
Her role was most famously played on the big screen by Olivia de Havilland in 1949.
The play, which was written by Ruth and Augustus Goetz, premiered in New York in 1947. It last appeared on Broadway in 1995.
Chastain, who is currently nominated for a Golden Globe for her turn in The Help, will hit the stage this autumn.
The actress will portray a shy young woman yearning for her wealthy father's acceptance in the show, which will be directed by Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo veteran Moises Kaufman.
Her role was most famously played on the big screen by Olivia de Havilland in 1949.
The play, which was written by Ruth and Augustus Goetz, premiered in New York in 1947. It last appeared on Broadway in 1995.
- 1/5/2012
- WENN
Jessica Chastain is to make her debut on Broadway, it has been announced. The Tree of Life actress will star in a revival of Ruth and Augustus Goetz play The Heiress. "Jessica Chastain is a great actress with chameleon-like prowess and enormous emotional intelligence; I think she's one of the best actresses of her generation. I'm thrilled to be working with her on The Heiress," director Moisés Kaufman said in (more)...
- 1/5/2012
- by By Tara Fowler
- Digital Spy
My colleague Aly Semigran truly was right this morning when she wrote that Benedict Cumberbatch and Jessica Chastain would star in everything from here on out. This afternoon, producers behind Broadway’s The Heiress announced that the Tree of Life/The Help/The Debt/Take Shelter/awards season red-carpet star will make her debut on the Great White Way in the revival of the Ruth and Augustus Goetz–penned play.
But you’ll have to see the Golden Globe–nominated Chastain on TV at countless awards shows before you can see her on Broadway — the show, which will be directed...
But you’ll have to see the Golden Globe–nominated Chastain on TV at countless awards shows before you can see her on Broadway — the show, which will be directed...
- 1/5/2012
- by Kate Ward
- EW.com - PopWatch
Jessica Chastain is taking her rising star to Broadway. The Golden Globe-nominated actress will make her Broadway debut with a starring role in "The Heiress," the producers said Thursday. Chastain will play the lead role of Catherine Sloper, the character Olivia de Havilland played in 1947's Oscar-winning film adaptation. This fall, the Tony Award-winning play -- written by Ruth Goetz and Augustus Goetz, and based on Henry James' 1880 novel, "Washington Square" -- is returning to the Great White Way after 17 years. It will be produced by Paula Wagner, and "The...
- 1/5/2012
- by Kurt Orzeck
- The Wrap
Breaking: After wrapping up a year that saw her turn in lauded performances in the films The Help, Tree of Life, Take Shelter and The Debt, Jessica Chastain is now turning her sights on Broadway. She will star in The Heiress, a revival of the Tony-winning play which will be directed by Moises Kaufman. The play is being mounted by Paula Wagner, Roy Furman and Stephanie P. McClelland for next fall. The play, written by Ruth Goetz & Augustus Goetz, was last performed on Broadway 17 years ago. Chastain is up for Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards for her 2011 work.
- 1/5/2012
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline
New York – Following a breakout year on screen, Jessica Chastain will make her Broadway debut in a major revival of Ruth Goetz and Augustus Goetz’s play The Heiress, based on the 1880 novel Washington Square by Henry James. Scheduled for fall 2012 at a theater to be announced, the production will be staged by Moisés Kaufman, whose recent Broadway credits include directing Robin Williams in Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo and Jane Fonda in 33 Variations. Photos: How 'The Help' Was Cast In addition to Chastain, the play also marks a first venture into Broadway for producer Paula Wagner, who
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- 1/5/2012
- by David Rooney
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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