Word: jeffreys
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...recording the colloquial black man’s blues. Brody is magnificent in the role, portraying a man determined to flaunt his success with a high-profile lifestyle, buying his friends new houses, booze, jewelry, and, of course, the movie’s namesake: Cadillacs. Complementary to Brody is Jeffrey Wright as the womanizing, ruthless, and somehow lovable Muddy Waters. Although it appears that Wright is mimicking the jowly facial expressions of Brando’s Don Corleone a little too closely, his believable performance shows his range as an actor—something his meager part in the recent...
...alike for his cast. “James [M.] Leaf [’10] and Julia [T.] Havard [’11] are the HRDC vets in the cast, so they demonstrate a strong understanding of the process for the other cast members,” he says. Meanwhile, Jeffrey J. Phaneuf ’10, a recruit of Bohrer’s, is one of several cast members appearing in his first dramatic piece at Harvard. Bohrer realized quickly that his original vision of the script was going to evolve based on the actors’ portrayals...
...Shopping.com and StubHub to generate growth. Many were profitable but distracting, as problems like lack of trust and shoddy search technology continued to ail the auction site, the main revenue driver. "Meg was reluctant to expand things like customer service because it would eat into eBay's margins," says Jeffrey Lindsay, senior analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein...
...been instances in the past where students have put the musical before their studies. While Shoag claims he was very sensitive to this issue, there is a chance that HMS may still be putting its musicals before its curriculum: neither the show’s producers nor HMS Dean Jeffrey S. Flier could identify the cancer slide shown on the back of the program as part of an ad by the Pathology department. “It looks pretty nasty though,” Flier says. —Mia P. Walker
...Food is an extremely interesting subject,” says Harvard alum Jeffrey L. Steingarten ’64, food columnist for Vogue, frequent judge on the Food Network’s “Iron Chef America,” and acclaimed food essayist. “It’s certainly more important than sex. If you want to know which subject is really more interesting to the human race, just fast for 36 hours.”Over the past few decades Harvard has taken the message behind Steingarten’s comments to heart. Formerly...