Word: lloydã
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Everyone else will sit there wondering why the characters, who are about as substantial as the clothes they wear, are doing any of things they do. After Agent Lloyd??€™s disclosure, Burdett is forced to contemplate the marginal utility of stealing another diamond. With the potential benefits of being a little bit richer weighed against the likely costs of imprisonment in a maximum security facility, all but one option falls away for any logical viewers, but obviously not for the insensible writers...
Particularly outstanding was Joshua M. Brener ’07 as Lloyd, the director of Nothing On; Brener’s exasperation, exhaustion and manic self-dramatizing perfectly captured Lloyd??€™s overwhelmed and overeducated personality. Margaret A. Weathers ’04 was fine as Belinda, the play’s straight woman and Nothing On’s only cast member without major physical or emotional problems; her constant attempts to restore the squabbling cast to order were accompanied by a businesslike aplomb and a tight, cheery grin. And Sara E. O’Brien...
...from Lloyd??€™s cursory observations, which she tracks through her subscription to Harvard Magazine, she believes that Harvard’s negotiation with neighbors comes later in the game and with less actual give and take than the process at Columbia...
...left a good impression even on local activists, although Lloyd??€”not Stone—was the Columbia administrator with whom they dealt most often...