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Still, each of the characters seems believable in Curt Miller's production. The actors do a fine job of highlighting the three-dimensional nature of these characters, who are sympathetic if not always honorable. Thurston plays the sniveling, pathetic figure of the party-giver and "sugar daddy" with a sufficient amount of groveling to make his character farcical but not iritating. Fields makes the switch to his various characters (a barman, a sergeant, Lenny) with ease and enhances the dark humor on stage...

Author: By Natasha H. Leland, | Title: Dark Humor at Triangle | 10/28/1993 | See Source »

...time we ran into City Hall Ave., we were getting kind of pooped, so we stopped for a break at a store called Brookstone. This turned out to be a great move, since the hot item at Brookstone these days is the Electric Massage-Giver. They come in every shape and size, and for all imaginable body parts. Okay, so they don't carry an electric earlobe massager. But they have just about every other kind...

Author: By Ariela Migdall, | Title: Holy Cannoli! Ricotta bliss, via MBTA | 10/21/1993 | See Source »

According to a report by the Population Reference Bureau, 1 in 5 preschoolers - now has a father as primary care giver, up from the 15% figure that was constant from 1965 until the late 1980s. One reason is that more fathers are working part time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: News Digest September 19-27 | 10/4/1993 | See Source »

Each trunk is laid horizontally on trestles or a steel frame. All are, in some legible or at least imaginable way, figures. Great Ursa, 1987, suggests a woman giving birth. The wooden trunk of Giver, 1992, is shaped like an enormous hand. The metal beak of Sroka, 1992, juts at you like the ramming prow of an ancient galley, while the big blade of steel that splits the body of Winged Trunk, 1989, could be read either as a weapon that has given the body its deathblow or as a protective shield. Sometimes the metal fittings read as shells...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dark Visions Of Primal Myth | 6/7/1993 | See Source »

...actually did so is unprovable; he denied it, perhaps because of social necessity, and modern assertions on either side of the question are clouded by the racial politics of tradition vs. revisionism. For author Erickson, the power of his theme's dark vision sweeps away argument. Jefferson was the giver of America's creed of life and liberty, but he was tormented and ineffective at facing the nation's blood curse of slavery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liberty's Dark Dream | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

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