Word: juliets
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...from any student organization here, we want to bring in professionals to work with the undergraduate actors, to speak to and mentor,” says Fredricks. As a start, Benjamin Evett, Artistic Director of the Actor’s Shakespeare Project, will direct “Romeo and Juliet,” which opens at the end of April in the outdoor Kirkland and Adams House courtyards, a setting that harkens back to the outdoor roots of the company. The production of “Much Ado About Nothing” that Lithgow so enjoyed took place in Harvard...
...Debating on behalf of the anti-final club position, Juliet S. Samuel ’09, who is also a Crimson editorial executive, outlined reasons final clubs belong in the lowest circle of the inferno. Her three major ones: final clubs institutionalize gender differences, punching is damaging to an individual, and clubs institutionalize privilege...
...Casino. That's why I'm disappointed. I thought Scorsese would make a different movie. I understand they really liked Infernal Affairs. But, for me, if I take a story from somewhere, I'll take only the soul of the story. Nowadays, if you want to remake Romeo and Juliet, you have to change...
...Bolshoi became a primary cultural ambassador of the newly founded Soviet Union - a role it maintained for the next seven decades. Through the years, the Old Theater's stage was home to some of dance's biggest names, including Galina Ulanova, who danced the definitive Romeo and Juliet in the 1950s, and her contemporaries, the couple Ekaterina Maximova and Vladimir Vasiliev. During the height of the cold war, it remained one of the Soviet Union's most potent exports. Beautiful and mysterious, the Russian dancers' sleek lines and avant-garde choreography dazzled Westerners...
...that he hasn't faltered, sometimes spectacularly. His MTV-infused version of Romeo and Juliet was intended to reach young patrons, but when it toured in the West in the summer of 2005, it bombed with audiences and critics alike. But for Ratmansky, failure is just the occasional price of trying new things. "I would do it again," he shrugs. "It was a breakthrough for the company. There were a lot of younger people in the audience. Tastes are different everywhere; something that was adored in Paris might be hated in London...