3 result(s) for censored in Entertainment
Leslie Mandoki, Gábor Csupó & László Szűcs Reunite at Chain Bridge in Budapest
- 30 Jul 2025 10:56 AM
- entertainment
At the Széchényi Chain Bridge, three friends - Leslie Mandoki, Gábor Csupó, and László Szűcs - were captured on camera as they stood together once again, fifty years later, at the secret place where they once made the biggest decision of their lives.
Dead Can Dance Concert, Budapest Aréna, 26 June
- 26 Jun 2019 5:24 AM
- entertainment
Since their inception in Melbourne in 1981, Dead Can Dance have been informed by folk traditions from all over Europe, not just solely in terms of instrumentation, but also by secular, religious and spiritual practices.
Now On: Moving Walls 22, Open Society Archives Budapest
- 19 Nov 2015 8:01 AM
- entertainment
For the first time in Europe the public is invited to the exhibition 'Moving Walls 22 / Watching You, Watching Me'. It explores how photography can be both an instrument of surveillance and a tool to expose and challenge its negative impact. The exhibition is at the Open Society Archives and will run until December 8 and will then travel to Berlin.
Leslie Mandoki, Gábor Csupó & László Szűcs Reunite at Chain Bridge in Budapest
- 30 Jul 2025 10:56 AM
- entertainment
At the Széchényi Chain Bridge, three friends - Leslie Mandoki, Gábor Csupó, and László Szűcs - were captured on camera as they stood together once again, fifty years later, at the secret place where they once made the biggest decision of their lives.
Dead Can Dance Concert, Budapest Aréna, 26 June
- 26 Jun 2019 5:24 AM
- entertainment
Since their inception in Melbourne in 1981, Dead Can Dance have been informed by folk traditions from all over Europe, not just solely in terms of instrumentation, but also by secular, religious and spiritual practices.
Now On: Moving Walls 22, Open Society Archives Budapest
- 19 Nov 2015 8:01 AM
- entertainment
For the first time in Europe the public is invited to the exhibition 'Moving Walls 22 / Watching You, Watching Me'. It explores how photography can be both an instrument of surveillance and a tool to expose and challenge its negative impact. The exhibition is at the Open Society Archives and will run until December 8 and will then travel to Berlin.









