Word: heineman
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...drunk. Drunkenness is a dimension of the play, one that changes with time, allows constant development of the characters and permits repetition and refinement of the themes. Frank McCarthy and Cathie Robinson as the middle-aged history professor George and his bitch wife Martha, and Al Ronzio and Lori Heineman as their young faculty-party acquaintances, Nick and Honey, work well under the requirements of this changing dimension. Much of the success of the Atma production of Virginia Woolf depends on the four actors' ability to alter their speech, motions, and emotions in the constantly changing context of their characters...
...casual acquaintances into attacks and confessions that bring Nick and Honey to quite real psychological bondage to the older couple, and that expose to both couples and to the audience, the real horrors of their childless marriage. Honey is a nervous dependent type, played a little affectedly by Miss Heineman; the process of subjugation has to work hardest on the strong, young-and-ambitious biology professor, Nick, Al Ronzio's handling of the problem of this difficult subjugation is confident, if at times momentarily ambiguous, and ultimately satisfying. As his position changes in the space of a few hours from...
...anger not at the scheming Richelieu or the irresponsible Louis or the decaying monarchy that protects the two, but at Richelieu's agent Milady de Winter. With a curiously pathological doggedness, the play heaps all the injustices in its world at the doorstep of the woman. Unfortunately, Lori Heineman isn't quite capable of infusing the role with the stature and presence it demands. She is simply not convincing as a foil for D'Artagnan and the rest of the boys in his band, and so ends the play more a pathetic scapegoat than tragic villainess...
...volume and productivity, officers of the employees' company predicted earnings of $81.9 million over the next five years. The line, which is expected to make a small profit this year, has been in the red for the past two years. That was one reason why Northwest Industries' Heineman wanted to sell...
...another buyer. "The employees have been pressing to buy," he says. There is one undeniable benefit for Northwest Industries. Because the line will be sold for less than the book value of its assets, Northwest will get a tax credit estimated as high as $225 million. That should help Heineman's conglomerate speed up its switch into faster-moving areas of business...