Successful people deserve successful photos.
Read MoreOn Corporate Headshots | The Do's, The Don'ts, and How to Rock Your Next Corporate Headshot Session
Successful people deserve successful photos.
Read MoreCharles Dickens' Great Expectations at Everyman Theatre in Baltimore. Production photography by ClintonBPhotography.
Read Morewritten and directed by Leegrid Stevens
The depths of mankind’s last unknown frontiers – outer space and a grieving heart – are explored in this brave and funny new play about a woman’s solo journey to Mars.
Read MoreDesign trends are changing, online profiles are changing, social media has certain ratio requirements for thumbnails and photos, theatre will always want...
Read MoreSeptember 7, 2016 - October 9, 2016
By Frederick Knott | Adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher | Directed by Donald Hicken
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ClintonBPhotography | Katie O. backstage during The Beaux' Stratagem
Your mirror is a liar. My mirror is a liar. We have spent our entire lives looking at an inverted image of ourselves. A mirrored image. And that flipped image is what can make photos of ourselves seem unsettling and unfamiliar. The Mere-Exposure Effect and what it means when you're looking at your headshots.
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By Tennessee Williams
April 13 – June 12, 2016
Directed by Derek Goldman
Part of The Great American Rep
Join the conversation on Facebook and Twitter using #EmanStreetcar
One of the most remarkable plays of our time, Tennessee Williams' Pulitzer Prize-winning Southern drama comes to life on Everyman's stage. Blanche DuBois, a faded and delicate Southern Belle, has mysteriously arrived on the doorstep of her younger sister, Stella, and her husband, the sexy yet brutish Stanley Kowalski. Blanche makes herself at home in the couple's small apartment. However, Blanche's web of lies to cover her past soon begins to crumble. Her downward spiral brings her face to face with Stanley, leading to a final plea of passion and desperation that changes them both forever. 68 years after it was written, A Streetcar Named Desire is as spellbinding as ever.
"Tennessee Williams' most celebrated work." – New York Times
Production photos: ClintonBPhotography