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Miller's Hamlet begins with the second scene of Act I, at Claudius's speech, "Though yet of Hamlet our dear brother's death/the memory is green..." The justification for this is that the opening scene is unnecessary, since the ghost turns up again, anyway, and the scene does not add to the action. This argument has some validity, since the opening of the second scene introduces the entire court and establishes the character of Claudius, but the first scene is necessary to define the supernatural character of Hamlet's obsession. Miller is cheating by omitting it, since it tends...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Hamlet | 1/12/1971 | See Source »

...life has really been a lot more interesting. Most movie stars think that way, actually, and not a few of them have committed it all to paper. What makes "Don't Fall Off the Mountain" different from the usual drivel is that Shirley wrote it herself-no ghost, no collaborator, no pix and, alas, no visible editor. Though her prose is occasionally awful, it can also be crisp and energetic. The lady really is something of a latter-day Richard Burton-the explorer, that is. She has been trapped in a coup d'état in the remote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Notable | 12/28/1970 | See Source »

...that a crowd is present, he frames a few hundred thousand people cheering. Period. When he wants to emphasize the "frail nobility" and "still small voice" of a group of blacks praying for Johnson before the stadium in Reno, he sticks them in what suddenly seems to be a ghost town, and pans slowly, portentously, to the white-filled stadium. He handles his fight scenes-what there is of them-clumsily. Giving up habitual Ritt photographer James Wong Howe was particularly unfortunate in this respect, as Howe was the man who donned roller skates and took his camera into...

Author: By Michael Sragow, | Title: Ersatz Ethos The Great White Hope opening Dec. 21 at the Music Hall | 12/17/1970 | See Source »

...Scrooge are really scary. Jacob Marley takes Scrooge out to show him the spirits of the damned floating by, and those spirits are just hideously deformed. And they come right at you, and they stare at you, and I for one didn't feel like staring back. The Ghost of Christmas Future is a pretty frightening figure in Dickens, a hooded, faceless creature who never speaks, but Bricusse adds a scene in which Scrooge falls into his newly dug grave, catching a glimpse of a skull under the hood of the ghost, and tumbles all the way down into Hell...

Author: By Richard Bowker, | Title: Films Scrooge at your local theater, through the joyous holiday season | 12/17/1970 | See Source »

INCOMES policy" has been the ghost haunting the Nixon Administration's economic debates. It will neither go away nor, usually, assume any definite shape. The idea that the Government should try to guide private wage and price decisions into noninflationary paths has been urged on reluctant White House leaders by Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, Assistant Treasury Secretary Murray Weidenbaum, many private economists, some foreign central bankers, and a growing number of President Nixon's big-business supporters. Few of these advocates have specified what form an incomes policy should take or how tough it should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A High-Level Call for Guidelines | 12/7/1970 | See Source »

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