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Word: agamemnon (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...particular hell is this: while Ezra Mannon (Agamemnon) is away at war, his wife Christine (Clytemnestra) takes a lover, Adam Brant (Aegisthus). Daughter Lavinia (Electra) adores her father, hates her mother and is smitten with Adam. Ezra's return results in homicide and suicide. When the killing ends, Lavinia locks herself in the ancestral mansion to placate the ghosts of her forebears in solitary, lifelong penance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Day of Wild Wind | 11/27/1972 | See Source »

Stephen Hoye as Orestes cleverly underplays his role in the early stages of the play; then, at the point when he takes possession of his identity as Agamemnon's avenger, his demeanor hardens, in a manner as shocking to Electra as it is to the audience...

Author: By James M. Lew?, | Title: The Theatregoer The Flies at the Loeb Drama Center until April 18 | 4/11/1970 | See Source »

...influence on Mabler and certain of the later expressionist composers. But Bruckner can be dismissed as easily, and with as much in telligence, as can Beethoven or Chartres Cathedral. This image of an uninspired symphonic rhetorician of beleaguered loquacity, "tortive and errant" as Shakespeare's Agamemnon, must yield to a clearer portrait of a consummately endowed symphonist firmly in the classical tradition...

Author: By Chris Rochester, | Title: The Concertgoer Boston Philharmonia at Sanders Sunday evening | 10/29/1969 | See Source »

Linotyping in the '20's was under the capable mismanagement of Dick Dyer, and credit goes to him for the worst "pruf hacks" (proofreading errors) of the decade. On one occasion Dyer, offended by the euphonics of Agamemnon's name, proceeded to alter it to "Agoddammit." Likewise, a bit of theological profundity on the merits of the Christian faith lost its effort in no small degree when the head above it appeared proclaiming "Christianity: A Positive Farce...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: History of the Crimson Survival, Solvency, and, Once in a While, Something Serious to Editorialize About | 9/18/1969 | See Source »

...ability to change the color of his verse to fit the subject but that wizard lizard's faculty of independently focusing each eye. The left Lowell eye may be modishly on the topical-Che Guevara, police, R.F.K., student riots, Dr. Spock. But the right eye glints backwards to Agamemnon, Sir Thomas More, Napoleon, King David, Adam. "I am learning to live in history," Lowell writes and adds, as his chameleon's tongue flicks out to ingest another aphorism: "What is history? What you cannot touch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Chameleon Poet | 6/6/1969 | See Source »

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