Word: bowsing
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The sharpest zingers are directed at the National Endowment (a funder of Sullivan's show) and at what Sullivan calls "the process of both censorship and self-censorship," as when the imaginary troupe's artistic director cites the works she dare not mount except in bowdlerized form. In the play...
The cast will change throughout the season, both during the current run and again when the production is revived in the spring. What remains is the controversial conception. When Zambello and her production team came on for their opening-night bows, cheers for the plaid-less performers turned to jeers...
The words new and change will show up even more often in Clinton's speeches, along with bows to private enterprise, as the Governor literally talks himself hoarse at one appearance after another. "We've got to change this country," he preached in Seattle. "The change will revitalize the private...
The texture and timbre of the piece are complex, exuberant and expressive. The clarinetist and flutist alternate between different clarinets and flutes, two percussionists play a wide range of instruments and the violinist and cellist play at times with their bows upside down. Wild, chaotic sections contrast with tame sections...
Just as Wright was a modernist who didn't like the rubric, so too was he a prototypical modern figure in all the meretricious pop senses. He was a child of a dysfunctional family. He wore long hair and dressed expensively and eccentrically for effect: broad-brimmed hat, cape, velvet...