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- Bridge sold rights for a film and novel. Mr. Apology by Campbell Black was published by Ballantine Books in 1984, and this was adapted by screenwriter Mark Medoff for the HBO thriller, Apology (1986).
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Jan 17, 2021 · The man who called himself Mr. Apology knew more than 100,000 of them thanks to his Apology Line, which let people call in and anonymously confess their misdeeds.
Bridge sold rights for a film and novel. Mr. Apology by Campbell Black was published by Ballantine Books in 1984, and this was adapted by screenwriter Mark Medoff for the HBO thriller, Apology (1986). The film switched the sex of the conceptual artist from male to female (portrayed by Lesley Ann Warren).
The description matched an unsolved murder, a detective told Mr Bridge. But Mr Bridge did not want to break his pledge to callers to keep their confessions anonymous, and instead agreed to play ...
- Hannah Paine
Mar 3, 2021 · In New York City, from 1980 until the mid-nineties, an artist named Allan Bridge, known to the public only as Mr. Apology, conducted a social experiment and art project from his Manhattan loft.
- Sarah Larson
Jan 25, 2021 · In 1980, the conceptual artist Allan Bridge came up with an idea to allow strangers to leave confessions on a telephone answering machine.
Bridge eventually introduced call-in options with topics that included child abuse, hatred, addiction, crime and homosexuality – a cause of many horrendous attacks at the time.
Apr 21, 2021 · In 1980, an artist called Allan Bridge posted flyers around the streets of Manhattan, New York City. “ATTENTION CRIMINALS,” they read. “You have wronged people. It is to people that you must apologise, not to the state, not to God. Get your misdeeds off your chest! Call apology (212) 255-2748.”