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ROBERTS Listen, however you label it, it's just good work for me, you know? Joanne's so fantastic to play, and between the hair and the tits and the attitude, bring it--if that's matronly, I loved every second of it. I don't read that many scripts. I finish less than I care to reflect upon. I mean, it's just s___, it's just a big pile of steaming s___ that sits in my house and drives me crazy because it's paper, and I don't want to send more paper to China...
...convictions in a court of law, apart from speeding when I was very young. But I have plenty of political convictions. Can you rescue me? God." Johnson is a natural comedian from his feet (often in his mouth) to the seemingly electrified tips of his abundant white-blond hair. The question that plagues his party leaders is whether this beguiling wit will propel him to political success or risible failure...
...piece, featuring Miller and Beth G. Shields ’10 in jeans and casual shirts. Their quick and light movements paired with Death Cab for Cutie’s “Crooked Teeth” was an unusual combination that was quite pleasant. Similarly, the free flowing hair and sarong-style skirt of Marin J.D. Orlosky ’07-’08, who is also a Crimson staff writer, in “Cavedweller” (choreographed by Joshua Legg) was an unexpectedly relaxed costume choice for the highly skilled and sensual movements that she executed.The...
...this electric phase of Dylan’s life is so fascinating that watching Blanchett feels like watching Dylan in Martin Scorsese’s 2005 documentary “No Direction Home.” She channels Dylan. Her voice is perfect. Her walk is perfect. Even her hair is perfect.Jude literally blows his audience away with a new, electric sound. And the fact that a woman is playing the role of Dylan proves equally as shocking and strange for the modern audience as his electric playing was when it first appeared in the mid 1960s. Jude?...
Those who remember Duran Duran usually remember the hair, frosted to 1980s-excess perfection. Or maybe the videos, replete with scantily-clad, poorly-fed European models. Of course, there were also the hits: “Hungry Like the Wolf,” “Girls on Film,” and “Rio.” For the last decade, however, most conversational references made to Duran Duran have been ironic and anachronistic. The band’s been branded as a Live-Aid relic, the forgotten child of the first MTV audience. Those mantles...