Search Details

Word: diese (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

VERDI: REQUIEM (2 LPs; Angel). When Verdi wrote his Requiem, most critics complained that it was too passionate and sensuous, but one sympathizer de fended him. Italians have their own emo tional habits, he argued, and should be allowed to "talk to the dear Lord in the Italian language." Conductor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Listings: Oct. 2, 1964 | 10/2/1964 | See Source »

As portrayed by Actress Novak, Mildred giggles a lot and speaks cockney like a girl who learned the sound of Bow bells from somewhere in South Chicago. But she still manages to make life hell for Philip (Laurence Harvey), the sensitive clubfooted medical student whom she meets, seduces and betrays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Back in Bondage | 10/2/1964 | See Source »

Successful Formula. Surprisingly, despite all this spending and all the publicity about the most dramatic changes in years, there are no sudden styling turns in the 1965s - nothing like the sleek airplane-nosed model introduced by Studebaker in 1950, or the fins that sprouted all over in 1957. There are...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Autos: The Change Is Gradual: Slabs, Cubes & Some Curves | 9/25/1964 | See Source »

No such luck. The ape woman dies in childbirth. The spiv, robbed by a cruel fate of his bearded breadwinner, faces destitution-or even employment. But at the last minute he is saved by a master stroke of showmanship: he discovers that the public, which paid good money to see...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Grotesque Burlesque | 9/18/1964 | See Source »

The first came with the completion of her first novel, The Voyage Out, about a love-struck girl who dies of an irrelevant fever. She had "an almost pathological hypersensitivity to criticism, so that she suffered an ever increasingly agonizing nervous apprehension as she got nearer to the end of...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Unafraid of Virginia Woolf | 9/18/1964 | See Source »

Previous | 435 | 436 | 437 | 438 | 439 | 440 | 441 | 442 | 443 | 444 | 445 | 446 | 447 | 448 | 449 | 450 | 451 | 452 | 453 | 454 | 455 | Next