Independent Lens - 1999 Loaded Gun Life and Death and Dickinson 5-8 was released on:
USA: 16 December 2003
Walt Whitman & Emily Dickinson
In Touch with Death - 1913 was released on: USA: June 1913
Death Bank - 2014 was released on: USA: 4 July 2014
Death's Chronicles - 2013 was released on: USA: 15 June 2013
Death Dealers - 2012 was released on: USA: 28 November 2012
Nicole Jesson has: Played Auditioning Emilies in "Independent Lens" in 1999. Played Rebecca Gore in "The Gores of Massachusetts" in 1999. Played An Emily Dickinson in "Loaded Gun: Life and Death and Dickinson" in 2002. Played Dog Walker in "Business or Pleasure" in 2014. Played Dog Walker in "Odyssey" in 2014.
Dickinson's chief physician gave her cause of death as Bright's disease.
Independent Lens - 1999 Death of a Shaman 5-25 was released on: USA: 27 May 2003
In the poem Because I could not stop for Death by Emily Dickinson, death is in the carriage with the speaker.
Whitman sees death as a return to earth, but Dickinson views death as leading to a spiritual afterlife.
Whitman sees death as a renewing the earth, while Dickinson views death as spiritual rebirth.
Billy Collins has: Performed in "Rock and Roll Fantasy" in 1992. Performed in "Independent Lens" in 1999. Played himself in "Loaded Gun: Life and Death and Dickinson" in 2002. Performed in "Billy Collins: On the Road with the Poet Laureate" in 2003. Played himself in "TEDTalks" in 2006. Played himself in "Ferlinghetti: A City Light" in 2009.
Dickinson W. Richards died on February 23, 1973 at the age of 77.
her beliefs were death and her love of lierature
In Emily Dickinson's poem "Because I could not stop for Death," the speaker is accompanied by Death and Immortality in the carriage. Death is personified as a polite and patient gentleman while Immortality is depicted as a chaperone-like figure accompanying them on their journey.
Damsel of Death - 2002 was released on: USA: 2002 (New York International Independent Film and Video Festival)
Emily Dickinson lived in Amherst, Massachusetts for the majority of her life. She was born there in 1830 and lived in the family home, now known as the Emily Dickinson Museum, until her death in 1886.