Word: hamilton
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...THIS END, John Hurt, as Winston, is also marvelous. Previously John Merrick in The Elephant Man and the fool in Olivier's King Lear, Hurt is the archetypal common man, his face a veritable roadmap of toil and suffering. His love scenes with the fresh-faced Suzanna Hamilton (Julia) are as tenderly pathetic as the tiny, dilapitated room in which they take place. He is dwarfed by a huge video screen as he sits hunched and writes in his diary, an action that seems both puny and heroic. Throughout the film, Hurt never loses that peculiar combination of hope...
Nonetheless it was Princeton that scored first in the middle period At 6:2a Tim Driscoll took a beautiful Greg Hamilton feed in the lot and took Blair high and left...
Other Massachusetts runaways made smaller contribution. Winchester's Kevin Conly notched two assists, and Sudbury's Scott Webster and Hamilton's Adam Snow both added an assist. Other than Schwalb, paul Marcotte was the only Eli Bay Stater who tailed to score...
...decision to streamline ITT was a long time coming, partly because Geneen was a long time going. He turned 65 in 1975 but was reluctant to retire. Staying on as chairman, he installed an heir apparent, Lyman Hamilton, as % chief executive officer in 1978. But after Hamilton started planning a big reorganization, Geneen sacked...
John Hurt, for example, plays Winston as if he were suffering the last stages of consumption; repellent in his grayness and enervation, Hurt is oddly compelling too. As Julia, Suzanna Hamilton plays her harshly lighted love scenes with a nakedness, both physical and emotional, that is astonishing in its neediness. By making the romance more explicit, Radford gives it a pathos and a symbolic weight that are, if anything, more affecting than in the novel. Finally, the late Richard Burton as O'Brien, the couple's betrayer and interrogator, gives a last performance that is all silky corruption, perfumed malice...