Word: claddings
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...striving entrepreneurs, the city is defined by its intimate sense of neighborhood, what Girard calls its "lived-in-ness." Walk Shanghai's alleyways at night and inhale the smell of braised pork wafting out of a communal kitchen, hear the slap of a shuttlecock struck by a pajama-clad girl, catch a glimpse of a chandelier in a threadbare bedroom-once part of a ballroom in some silk merchant's mansion, now subdivided to house a dozen families. Yet I know this Shanghai-my Shanghai, Girard's Shanghai-is vanishing. All that will be left are these phantom images...
...orchestra will have to go back in time to correct it.” The orchestra normally performs in the intimate setting of Lowell Lecture Hall, but for this tenth-anniversary concert, Pops will perform to a larger audience in Sanders Theatre. Sanders Theater, usually home to the tuxedo-clad players of the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, will get a good dose of the whimsical when Pops invades, according to Weinbloom. “It’s going to be tricky to fit that inclusive group theatricality of [Lowell Lecture Hall]…into the formality of Sanders...
...dressed in bright blue gave a particularly sloppy performance, one of which opened with an extremely messy pirouette turn. A pair in green entered with leaps that, because of their bent front legs and little altitude, were disappointing to watch. Nonetheless, Sarah C. Kenney ’08 (also clad in green) was the one redeeming factor of the piece, giving a generally clean performance...
Indeed, revelry was prominent from the moment Jadakiss and his posse hit the stage, rapping while scantily clad models snaked around them to the cheers of the audience. The show included a number of surreal skits such as a funeral procession that started off the Southern segment of the production and a reenactment of R. Kelly’s “Trapped in the Closet.” Interspersed within these spectacles were dance performances from the Black Men’s Forum Steppers, Bhangra, and the Expressions Dance Company. Nirvana blared during New York; models danced around stage...
It’s hard not to like a show as tawdry and touching as “Cabaret.” After all, where else can you get scantily-clad men and women, lascivious dancing, and Fascism all rolled up into about two hours, save for perhaps at some oddly-themed strip club...