Word: goldmans
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...really believe that. In the words of that very smart screenwriter William Goldman, "Stars will not play weak, and they will not play blemished"--especially stars who are playing potential feminist paragons. Indeed, we're pretty sure Patrick Sheane Duncan's script will also find some circumstances to extenuate Serling's initial screw-up, since he's played by a star...
...without a few elbows being thrown. Lee Howard, president of Airline Economics International Inc., an industry consulting firm, estimates that 15% of domestic air traffic is now hauled by low-cost airlines, up from 10% little more than a year ago. According to Glenn Engel, an airline analyst at Goldman Sachs, the no-frills upstarts had revenues last year of $6 billion (out of an industry total of $75 billion to $80 billion), in contrast to $3 billion...
Wink, along with co-founders Matt Goldman and Phil Stanton, expanded on the group's past when responding to questions afterward...
After the official close of the program, Wink, Goldman and Stanton chatted with about 30 people, among them a graduate student writing a doctoral dissertation on the group. In this even less formal setting, they talked about topics such as grunge music, theater critics and psychotherapy...
When Robert Redford bought the screen rights to All the President's Men, he had little idea of the snags that lay in store. One was his hiring of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid scriptwriter William Goldman, who put emphasis on off-color newsroom humor. The move caused an uproar: "The Post nearly backed out of the project then, and [Executive Editor Benjamin C.] Bradlee was blunt with Redford. 'Just remember, pal,' he said, 'that you go off and ride a horse or jump in the sack with some good-looking woman in your next film...