

The full report goes much more in depth into the entire situation, discussing questionable things like how many staff members there actually are, and the presence of a 12 year old in the server that members found to be difficult.

"For instance, after saying he had a reveal planned for a day of the week, that day would come and go without a new development."Īpparently Kahraman has privately said that Abandoned is "on hold and he first needs to fund its development with a playable prologue, which our sources indicate he doesn't seem to be in a hurry to create." "Kahraman used to tell the group he was actively working on Abandoned, but as time went on, he would fail to show much of anything that seemed genuine or compelling, often even missing self-imposed deadlines," reads the report. In the process of interviewing "more than half a dozen people who have had close contact with Kahraman since September 2021," the report found that Kahraman, who at one point is described as "duplicitous and prone to mood swings," would over promise on many things, "including paid work for fans" but delivering little. Members that would try to ask for more out of Kahraman would risk being banned from the server. Read more about BSO’s Weimar Connections and AUB’s BA (Hons) Acting course.According to the report, "there is no meaningful evidence that Abandoned exists in any real way." The biggest question surrounding the game is whether it's even real or just poorly marketed, making this quite the claim from GameSpot.Īpparently, members that wanted access to "screenshots, animations, and even a page of the game's script" needed to sign an NDA, meaning some only spoke to GameSpot under the promise of anonymity. He added: “Our partnership with Arts University Bournemouth centres around supporting future generations of arts professionals and we’re proud to be able to offer students real world industry experience.”


“As well as performing alongside critically acclaimed actors Jemma Redgrave and Sara Kestelman, Laura, Jordan and Ruby will benefit from the direction of our Chief Conductor Kirill Karabits and internationally renowned composer and writer Gerard McBurney.” “Creative collaborations such as those between ourselves and the BSO provide fantastic performance opportunities for our students, enabling them to work alongside world-class industry professionals and gain valuable experience which they can draw on as they graduate and embark into the profession.”ĭougie Scarfe, Chief Executive of Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, said: “We’re delighted to be collaborating with AUB again for the UK premiere of Liszt’s Vor hundert Jahren, as we’re joined by Laura McKay, Jordan Finding and Ruby Russell. Katharine Piercey, AUB’s BA (Hons) Acting Course Leader, said: “We are thrilled that three of our acting students will be working with the BSO and Gerard McBurney on the UK premiere of Liszt’s A Hundred Years Ago. It is such an honour to have been involved.” no collective life, no voting powers, and no relations with the male company. “Being guided by the incredible Chief Conductor Kirill Karabits and letting the utterly magnificent orchestral sounds flow with the delivery of our words has been unforgettable. Women reviewed applicants and visited the home to oversee staff and girls. The acting students will be working with writer and composer Gerard McBurney, actresses Sara Kestelman (Germania) and Jemma Redgrave (Poetry), and the internationally acclaimed Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, who will also be performing compositions by Hummel and Strauss at Lighthouse, Poole (Wednesday 2 October) and London’s Cadogan Hall (Friday 4 October).īA (Hons) Acting student, Ruby Russell, said: “Performing alongside two actors as renowned as Jemma Redgrave and Sara Kestelman has been the most awe-inspiring experience, especially for us who are so new to the industry. According to Greek mythology, the three Moirai or ‘Fates’ were tasked with directing the fates of mortals from birth to death. Ruby Russell, Jordan Finding and Laura McKay, who are all studying BA (Hons) Acting at Arts University Bournemouth (AUB), will take up the roles of Zeus’ three daughters goddesses Clotho, Atropos and Lachesis. The actors will take to the stage to support Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra (BSO) at London’s Cadogan Hall, premiering the 1859 orchestral melodrama A Hundred Years Ago, which had been under wraps for more than 160 years after mysterious abandonment by its composer, Franz Liszt.
