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They are both inspired actresses?birds of a father?who seem sure to enjoy quite a flutter in the next few years. Some time this spring, Lynn will fly to London to make a movie with Rita Tushingham. Some time this summer, with Camelot in the can, Vanessa will fly to Turkey to make The Charge of the Light Brigade with Director Richardson?they agree that their divorce, which by then will probably be final, will not affect their professional relationship. The girls now have everything going for them, including the rumbustious new scene in cinema. The way things have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Actresses: Birds of a Father | 3/17/1967 | See Source »

Minor mishaps aside the Inter-Harvard Paper Airplane Grand Prix is shaping into a major event. The Quincy House dining room will be a-flutter next Wednesday and Thursday evenings with the varied creations of paper pilots...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Paper Airplane Pilots Practicing 'Graceful' Flights in Quincy House | 2/1/1967 | See Source »

Feminine Mind. Everything that Wilson ever did or said is explained against this matrix. In a letter to his first wife, Wilson referred to "the flutter and restlessness" of his spirits. By using the word "flutter," Wilson betrayed a quality "so feminine in its connotations that one should hesitate to employ it to describe a man." When Wilson ascribed to Premier Clemenceau "a kind of feminine mind," Freud-Bullitt call this "clearly an attempt to persuade himself that his own behavior was not feminine by transferring his own attitude to Clemenceau...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Games Some People Play | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

...George Etherege, Restoration fop and mover, tossed off a play called The Man of Mode; or, Sir Fopling Flutter. The play is unfettered by plot, unburdened by morals, unsourced by satire. Like the Glass Flowers, it is all for appearance, a collection of delicately made specimens of a certain type of life. The Man of Mode is very much of its age, not for all time. In this limp-wrist world, the winners win by virtue of their wit, and the losers lose for having the bad taste to display jealously -- a situation which confuses our twentieth-century sympathies. Furthermore...

Author: By Timothy Crouse, | Title: The Man of Mode | 12/9/1966 | See Source »

...players on stage. When some one does bring on a new tone, it blows the ether out of Etherege, and makes even the topical references and most elusive wit funny. Mr. Senelick (they've got no first names in the Genuine Antique program) breezes as Sir Foplin Flutter, looking like the Cowardly Lion, bantering in a voice that plummets and soars like Cyril Ritchard's. And with all clowning, he fools us into listening to every line he says. Mrs. Pitzele, as Mrs. Loveit, rustles about giving a brilliant performance as a woman wronged. Miss Cole does justice, with...

Author: By Timothy Crouse, | Title: The Man of Mode | 12/9/1966 | See Source »

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