Word: lovingly
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...lead in La Fille Mal Gardée, I had to watch the Royal Ballet [of London] tape every day. Every day. And I got to say, “Oh, I don’t like that,” or “I love that. Im going to take that.”THC: What are your future plans?MK: I definitely want to do all the classical ballets, and my dream role, Juliet. And I want to do [MacMillan’s] Manon… and John Neumeier’s Lady of the Camellias...
...refrains from such gestures of grandiose pomposity, her poems are imbued with a similar ear for the power of the mundane. “The Abattoir” is a chapbook with 23 poems that frequently use the everyday to direct the reader on to more abstract concerns of love, loss, and a decaying spirituality. Written in Cambridge and published out of Georgetown, Kentucky, the poems frequently evoke the spirit of down-home Americana. In “Window-Shopping,” a broken-hearted man stares into the windows of a “haberdashery...
...Elizabeth J. Krane ’11 says.The entire production of “Hair”—a show that chronicles the stories of a group of hippies, led by idealistic Claude (Gavin Creel) and rebellious Berger (Will Swenson), as they deal with sex, love, politics, and the counterculture of the sixties—has an organic feel. Oriental rugs cover the stage and spill out into the orchestra seating. Cast members freely interact with the audience, even wandering onstage to perform yoga before the show begins. “Hair”—part...
...When you attend your 1.7 football games a year, you are probably delighted by the antics of the biggest bigot of them all—the faux John Harvard who prances around, flaunting his hatred of southern Europeans and their culture. He wants you to love him, but he doesn’t want you to think about how disgusted he is that there are Harvard students in the stands whose surnames end in vowels, and not vowels that are only sometimes vowels (so-called “weekend warrior” vowels), but work-a-day, knock-around vowels...
...Since World War II—even during the supposed libertarian love-fest and free-market free-for-all of the 1980s—states have invested in their people as well as forsaken integration and cooperation when prudent. Market intervention has always been part of the globalization process. But, too often, the market is viewed as a multilateral institution and the state as a pesky force of isolationism. Despite this false perception, we should continue to see global cooperation and so-called “nationalistic” government action in tandem for the foreseeable future. They?...