Word: luluã
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...brings a breath of fresh air to the performance as Lulu, the young and attractive girl from the neighborhood. As the youngest member of the cast, Peacocke—who is a Crimson arts comper—definitely holds her own, as she effortlessly conveys Lulu??s complexity by highlighting the character’s youthful innocence and desire to be mature.However, the greatest applause goes to Ben T. Clark ’09, who steals the show with his portrayal of Goldberg, the sweet-talking, temperamental Jewish gangster. Clark’s representation of Goldberg is well...
...she’s still a character that endures and endears—her dress is the same bright red, and her licorice locks haven’t lost their bounce.Lulu Moppet, better known as the lively “Little Lulu?? of the eponymous cartoon, has made her way across newspapers, silver screens, and lunch-box covers since she was first created in 1935. Now, the comic starlet has landed in Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library among a historical legion of America’s women. The “Marge Papers...
...actually a normal guy and he really believes what he’s doing is the right thing,” she says.The University College of London transfer has previously portrayed female characters much “closer to home” in “Lulu?? and “The Vagina Monologues.” The role of Knock, the first villain Chan’s portrayed for Harvard audiences, has been “challenging and a lot of fun.”“I love playing a villain,” says...
...Lulu?? is great. It’s my first time on the mainstage and my first time with a visiting director which is great because it gives you a sense of objectivity about the level of work you do. And also he’s great because he gives a lot of new ideas because we tend to, well, not stagnate, but we only have each other to bounce ideas off of, so it’s great to have an outside force like that and working on the mainstage is wonderful. That kind of energy that...
...added sexual tension,” said Olga I. Zhulina ’09, who was at Lulu??s opening night with a female friend. “You would watch the actors, but then at certain points you would catch yourself looking at the guys, like they were part of the background and part of the play...