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Glass and his other collaborator, choreographer Susan Marshall, get around this difficulty by telling the story largely through music and movement, not singing. Paul and Lise are represented on stage not only by singers (Philip Cutlip and Christine Arand in both productions) but also by three dancers, enabling Glass and Marshall to illustrate various aspects of their personalities simultaneously. Indeed, Marshall's fluid, shifting, molting steps stand in marked contrast to Glass's crystalline music, scored for three electronic keyboards and recalling the textures, if not the melodies, of Igor Stravinsky's Les Noces. The collaborators--Cocteau obviously excepted--call...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MAXIMUM MINIMALISM | 12/9/1996 | See Source »

...facts. Some vendors come to the bazaar for sport: New York hoaxer Alan Abel, for example, specializes in planting false news items, like last fall's stories about the bogus $35 million lottery winner. Others show up because it is their job. Writing in the Gannett Center Journal, Scott Cutlip, a dean emeritus of journalism at the University of Georgia, cited estimates that 40% of the news comes from public relations specialists (who, at 150,000 strong, outnumber the country's 130,000 journalists). Still others try to hawk their stories for money, a trade-off that most respectable publications...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Shopping in The News Bazaar | 3/26/1990 | See Source »

...Kelly Cutlip was driving along a Los Angeles freeway in June 1988 when a speeding Toyota with a drug-dazed 22-year-old woman at the wheel traversed crazily five traffic lanes, crashed broadside into his pickup and gave him the ride of his life. Cutlip, 36, a marble mason from nearby Irvine, found himself strapped upside down as the truck skidded on its roof at 60 m.p.h., sparks flying past his head like an acetylene shower in a metal shop. "That's it," he announced to his wife that night. "That's the clincher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Californians Keep Out! | 11/13/1989 | See Source »

Within two months the Cutlips had sold their house and moved with their four children to Seattle, with no job and few friends, but with a determination to find a less stressful life. Today the family is settled in the wooded suburb of Issaquah in a cedar split-level that cost them $110,000 less than their California home. Even if Kelly's income has dipped 20%, his commute is mercifully brief. At the wheel, he says, he no longer starts at the sound of a backfire for fear it might be a highway shooting. "We were tired of being...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Californians Keep Out! | 11/13/1989 | See Source »

Complication. In Akron, after Chandler D. Cutlip, 62 and partially blind, was arrested weaving down a street behind the wheel of a panel truck, he pleaded guilty to driving without a license, added, "I can't see well enough...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Jun. 10, 1957 | 6/10/1957 | See Source »

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