Word: batmans
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...emphasize the play’s selling points and try to give it a more universal appeal.Spillane-Hinks and her producers mill about the Loeb Ex with colorful, comic book-inspired flyers advertising “P.O.W.W.!” (an acronym for the play cleverly disguised as Batman-esque onomatopoeia). The flyers featured two panels with stylized Lichtenstein drawings, one with the necessary information about auditions, the other attempting to move the play beyond early-twentieth century provincialism by emphasizing its basic draws: “Sex, Lies, and Patricide—in Beautiful Ireland!” Still...
...relaxed and affable Spillane-Hinks, Common Casting is an affair among friends, full of laughs and hugs. She and her producers mill about the Loeb Ex with comic book-inspired flyers advertising "P.O.W.W.!" (an acronym for the play cleverly disguised as Batman-esque onomatopoeia...
...dancers stood out throughout the course of the evening. Micaela B. Owusu ’07 should be commended for her masterful performance in numerous TAPS pieces, and Jeffrey A. Barnet ’06 and Brady G. Williams ’06 were amusing in their roles as Batman and Robin in the show’s finale. Perhaps the “Primetime” program did not live up to its “Must See” billing, but the choreography and skill of a few dancers certainly allowed the show to be entertaining...
...Batman Returns” (1992)—Max Shreck...
...person,” says Young, “haunted by dreams of the father who never accepted him”—to battle Reagan’s forces. He takes up the superhero moniker Blackman, joins up with a counterpart named Rushon (a campy reference to Batman and Robin) and George W. Bush as The French Tickler, and the trio ultimately puts Reagan back to rest. “I wanted to see what would happen if I introduced two poor black street people into the mix,” says Young. With a troop...