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Word: broadway (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...Arthur M. Sackler Museum, the latest addition to the architectural potpourri in the Quincy and Broadway Street area, has already caused ripples of both enthusiastic approval and emphatic disdain amongst avant-garde architectural critics...

Author: By Matthew Snyder, | Title: It's Art--for the Sake of Art | 10/17/1985 | See Source »

...collaboration that led Quintero to direct most of O'Neill's major plays and Robards to essay most of his greatest characters. Both men came to be haunted by O'Neill's melancholy, his Celtic love of self- ruin. Now, 28 years later, they have revived the production for Broadway...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Re-Creating a Stage Legend the Iceman Cometh | 10/14/1985 | See Source »

Boone, born in 1946 in San Diego, was a freewheelin' artisan, who never stayed in one place for long and dabbled in a little of everything. Not only was he involved in acting and comedy, but also he wrote a fairly successful off-Broadway play and a novel that received mixed reviews. In 1978 he was killed when his motorcycle collided with a margarine truck...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Oral Biography to Star Fictitious Dilettante | 10/8/1985 | See Source »

...implying that the customers are helping create the event rather than passively watching it. In this atmosphere, when the audience applauds some line of dialogue, it is hailing its own perspicacity as well as the actor's. The weakness of Lily Tomlin's one-woman show, which opened on Broadway last week, is that it eventually indulges in just such a fawning congratulation of the ticket holders. The show's strength is that for most of the way it is an acerbic send-up of the current national selfishness, coupled with a knowing and ungooey lament for the loss...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Let a Hundred Lilys Bloom the Search for Signs of Intelligent | 10/7/1985 | See Source »

...years later, Jeanne Moreau will star in another Tennessee Williams play, The Night of the Iguana. But this production is American, and she will be performing in English, the first time she has done so onstage. Opening in Baltimore in two weeks and on Broadway in November, the revival does not overawe her. "I don't think very much about what is dangerous or not," says the former sex symbol. "I can't panic. I don't have the time." To make her task even more unaccustomed, she chose to play the spinsterish New Englander, Hannah, and turned down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Oct. 7, 1985 | 10/7/1985 | See Source »

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