Hephzibah is a 1998 documentary film written, directed and produced by Curtis Levy. It looks at the life of concert pianist Hephzibah Menuhin.[1]

Hephzibah
Directed byCurtis Levy
Written byCurtis Levy
Produced byCurtis Levy
StarringKerry Armstrong
CinematographyErika Addis

Ray Brislin
Jenni Meaney
Paul Ree

Zoran Veljkovic
Edited byVeronika Jenet
Running time
75 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish

Reception

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Writing in the Herald Sun Leigh Paatsch gave it 3 stars noting "The movie does lose some of its cohesive focus as it addresses her later years, if only because little cinematic evidence of this period could be found"[2] Sheldon Kirshner of the Canadian Jewish News said that "Levy captures the essence of her personality in this affecting film."[3] In the Canberra Times Simon Weaving concludes "Kerry Armstrong's readings are delicate and insightful, and the music testament to Hephzibah's brilliance, but the rest struggles to keep up."[4]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^ Hall, Sandra (3 August 2006), "Hephzibah", The Sydney Morning Herald
  2. ^ Paatsch, Leigh (5 October 2006), "Hephzibah", The Herald Sun
  3. ^ Kirshner, Sheldon (28 September 2001), "Hephzibah", Canadian Jewish News
  4. ^ Weaving, Simon (7 October 2006), "Spotlight turned on an extraordinary woman Hephzibah", The Canberra Times
  5. ^ a b "Film industry hands out gongs", The Mercury, 15 November 1999
  6. ^ "Film's juicy fruit - Screen debutantes set to steal the AFI show", Illawarra Mercury, 12 November 1999
  7. ^ Harford, Sonia (16 December 1998), "Levy's `Hephzibah' documentary wins in Amsterdam", The Age
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