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S.F. International Film Festival timeline

In 1956, Irving "Bud" Levin organizes San Francisco’s Italian Film Week. The success of the film series prompts Italian consul general Pierluigi Alvera to suggest to Levin that he start an international film festival in San Francisco. » 1957: The San Francisco International Film Festival, run by Irving Levin, makes its debut on Dec. 4. Fifteen feature films screen at the 15-day affair, which takes place at the Metro theater. Satyajit Ray’s "Pather Panchali," receives the best-picture prize. Read More

S.F. Performances announces new season

President and founder Ruth A. Felt announced San Francisco Performances’ 28th season lineup Tuesday. The 66-event, 2007-08 season features chamber music, recitals, contemporary dance and jazz; it runs Sept. 28, 2007, through May 20, 2008, in San Francisco and Berkeley. Subscriptions are on sale now and single tickets go on sale Aug. 20. Read More

Nick and Vanessa Shack Up

Joined-at-the-hip lovebirds Nick Lachey and Vanessa Minnillo will be spending even more time together now. The duo moved into a new two-bedroom NYC condo April 15, reports People. Reps were mum on buzz that the bicoastal couple is also now sharing Nick’s West Coast house. Your move, Jessica and John. Mel B. names baby after Eddie MurphyFormer Spice Girl Melanie Brown is determined to make it official that Eddie Murphy is the father of her newborn baby. First, she put his name on the birth certificate. And now she’s given the infant his last name. Read More

Art & Entertainment: Places to go, people to see

Acclaimed Celtic singers Ashley Davis and Mary McLaughlin appear in an evening of colorful stories and luminous song at 8 tonight at Cafe Du Nord. Davis, an Irish-American born in Kansas, is a former soloist for Michael Flatley’s "Lord of the Dance"; McLaughlin, a fluent Gaelic speaker from Northern Ireland, now lives in California. The club is at 2170 Market St., San Francisco. Tickets are $16. Call (415) 861-5016. Read More

Decemberists stay the course

"Prog folk" isn’t exactly a familiar genre, but what else do you call rock music packed with "old-time" instrumentation, obscure literary references, brave musical choices and period costuming? Whether or not their music has its own aisle at the store, Portland rockers the Decemberists, who play the Warfield today and Thursday, are pioneering the sound in a big way. Read More

Britpop star moves past Pulp

Jarvis Cocker, the bohemian who fronted Britain’s brainy pop combo Pulp for two decades, still wields a sharp wit. Read More

Lively premiere explores a family life far from ‘Perfect’

In the twisted world of New York playwright Nicky Silver’s "Past Perfect," now receiving an impressive world premiere at Theatre Rhinoceros, everyone loves the wrong person, and almost everyone’s a little sadistic, or masochistic, or both. Read More

Tommy Lee vs. Kid Rock: Round Two

Are Pamela Anderson’s exes competing over a new woman? At a Victoria’s Secret party, a spy told Page Six, Tommy had eyes for Kid’s girlfriend, model May Andersen: "He was desperately trying to talk to May. Tommy even sent members of his entourage over to ask her to join him at his table." She reportedly declined. Madonna’s trip to Malawi a mysteryDid Madonna and her adopted son, David, meet with the boy’s biological father in Malawi — or did the singer’s handlers scratch the reunion at the last minute? Read More

Art & Entertainment: Places to go, people to see

Ever want go inside a stunning Pacific Heights home? Now’s your chance. This year’s San Francisco Decorator Showcase, now in its 30th year, features the architecturally significant four-story mansion at 2901 Broadway (at Baker Street). Open to the public for the first time, the 10,000-square-foot house was designed in 1927 by award-winning architect Henry Clay Smith for industrialist Milton S. Ray; the lot was once owned by Herbert Hoover. Read More

Exhibit reveals a ‘Delicate’ balance

Photography, besides allowing people to freeze time, furthers a human craving — voyeurism. Think of Alfred Eisenstaedt’s 1945 Life magazine photograph of a sailor kissing on a nurse on V-J Day, or Hank Walker’s picture of Robert and John F. Kennedy facing each other in a hotel room. The potency of these images largely stems from the subjects’ not knowing anyone is watching. Read More
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