Word: laughs
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...when they travel together, they make each other laugh. "Take the arrival at the airport in Bangladesh," says Bill. Given that there was a string of terrorist bombings in the days before their arrival, the military was out in force. And the tarmac was festooned in decorations to welcome the Gateses--including, bizarrely, a massive oil portrait of each. "She saw the army," says Bill, laughing. "She said, 'Hey, there's an army out here.' And I said, 'Yeah, wait until you see the picture of you. It's not too good.' It was just gigantic! You know, Mao would...
...called Cylons), sleeper cells, civil-liberties crackdowns and even a prisoner-torture scandal. The basic-cable budget sometimes shows in the production, but the writing and performances are first-class, especially Edward James Olmos as the noble but authoritarian commander in charge of saving the last remnants of humanity. Laugh if you want, but this story of enemies within is dead serious, and seriously good...
...norm,” said Irene S. Choi ’07. Currier House Committee Chair Jonathan C. Bardin ’06 said that his ideal use of the space would be for the “whole floor to be a student zone, where people can laugh as loud as they want with their friends.” He also said that it was important to make the area physically attractive. “Once you start to think of it as a more open student space, aesthetic starts to become really important,” said Bardin...
...expressions are necessary to convey the emotion onstage; but film acting, even in a Mel Brooks film, should be more subdued. Everyone in the cast is so hyped up that the audience sometimes misses the punch line.There are moments in “The Producers” that are laugh-out-loud funny, especially in the second act, where one can almost forget about the film’s missteps. Brooks’ music and comedy remain sharp and witty; if you missed Lane and Broderick’s performances on Broadway, the film does give you the chance...
...told friends and family what he would be doing last summer--an intensive program at an Ivy League business school--they thought he had given up on changing the world. "The common reaction I got was 'You're selling your soul to the devil,'" says Mihaly, 23, with a laugh...