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Word: fops (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Bobo. Peter Sellers, his fans may be happy to learn, is alive and living in Barcelona. There he sallies forth as a singing bullfighter impaled on the horns of a dilemma. A fop as a matador, a flop as a troubadour, he has decided to leave the corrida and seek a stage career. Down to his last peseta, he desperately accepts a dare by the local impresario (Adolfo Celi), who agrees to book him into his theater on one condition: Sellers must seduce Britt Eklund (Mrs. Peter Sellers offstage), an ice-cold big-league golddigger whose favorite phrase is "Mine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Blue Matador | 10/13/1967 | See Source »

...cartoonist (Richard Benjamin), She is his wife (Paula Prentiss), there's a fop actor (Jack Cassidy) who poses for the strip, and the name of the game is situation comedy. Premiere...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Listings: Sep. 8, 1967 | 9/8/1967 | See Source »

Alan Richards is far too surly and petulant to make Jean, Berenger's fop friend, as funny as he should be in the opening scenes. It may be that this petulance is the only way to make Berenger's lines work as well as they do, but I'm not convinced it is. Then, too, a good portion of Jean's badinage was lost in the cafe scene because it was never made clear to the audience that his remarks were meant to apply to a conversation at the next table and vice versa...

Author: By Charles F. Sabel, | Title: Rhinoceros | 12/10/1966 | 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 »

...whom he insisted on calling French because it was in that language that he read him), Bennett became the first popular novelist of his time to tell of the actual lives of recognizable people in words that ordinary readers could understand. This was not a happy accident. Beneath the fop, as British Biographer Dudley Barker shows, was a dedicated and gifted literary craftsman. He wanted to write good books, and make money -in that order-and he forever respected and tried to improve his art. As a young writer, he set himself the task of producing 1,000 words...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Author as Character | 9/2/1966 | See Source »

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