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Word: duetting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...staging and choreography, like the costumes, are also key in communicating Patience’s humor. Bunthorne’s onstage frolicking, especially in his delightful Act II duet with Lady Jane, “So Go To Him And Say To Him,” provides the production with some of its greatest humor...

Author: By Michelle Chun, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The Rewards of 'Patience' | 4/19/2002 | See Source »

...musical nature of the songs is often in direct contrast to the content. For instance, the lyrical love duet sung by John Hinckley (Patrick W. Hosfield ’05) and Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme (Julie Goldin) to the absent Jodie Foster and Charles Manson is musically the most beautiful number in the show, and their voices resonate with passion and fervor. Yet it is actually a song about obsession, control and the desire of two unbalanced individuals to do something tragically drastic to prove their love. Hosfield and Goldin play it totally straight, refraining from...

Author: By Adrienne E. Shapiro, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: ‘Assassins’ Hits Right On The Mark | 4/12/2002 | See Source »

...hook have always been a lethal combination. But Minogue has been doing a variation of her current skimpy act for the past decade (excepting a one-off duet with dour artiste Nick Cave), and U.S. audiences have roundly ignored her. Her new album, Fever, sold more copies in its first week of release than all her previous albums did over the past 11 years. What makes her breakthrough even more confusing is that it comes just as America is closing the window on a four-year period of relentless teen pop. So why Kylie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Skin Deep and Proud of It | 4/8/2002 | See Source »

Before you insensitively joke: “The only duet those two will be singing is ‘Bye, Bye, Bye,’” think back on the history between Spears and Timberlake, and you will realize just how many strings were attached to their relationship...

Author: By Olamipe I. Okunseinde, | Title: Star-Crossed Lovers | 4/3/2002 | See Source »

...thrushes, nightingales, orioles, robins, warblers, and all the birds of our forests.” The birds awake in stages, beginning with Midnight, through the Dawn Chorus and ending at Noon. The music begins with the lone nightingale represented by a succession of octaves on the solo piano. A duet of nightingales soon follows. The orchestra does not play a large role in the piece, and when it does enter the forest of birds it serves as an indicator of the timbre of the birds’ voices and their environment...

Author: By Julie S. Greenberg, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ballet, Beethoven and the Birds | 3/22/2002 | See Source »

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