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...halt and lame. But there is nothing inspirational in him and nothing ennobling in his impact. In the opening scenes, the actors appear in clownish whiteface and lurch like robots. The playing reaches its tenderest pitch at an utterly perverse moment: Harriet Harris, as Orgon's wife, fakes lust for Tartuffe so as to reveal his perfidy to her husband, throbbing with an emotion that we never see Orgon arouse in her. The play's visual imagery is equally extreme. At the moment the lights go up on the institutional white, bricklike walls, geometrically marked floors and scattered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: A Schooling in Surveillance | 8/27/1984 | See Source »

...infact, put in the position of playing straight man to all the outrageous "clues" the plot offers Krabbe's magnificent portrayal of a very un-straight obsession keeps the character from being an imbecile, even given the vacuous tackiness of Herman, Christine's lover and his object of lust. Herman turns out to be a German plumbing contractor who not only looks, but sounds, like a talking centerfold...

Author: By Hanne-maria Maijala, | Title: High-Tech Wreck | 8/7/1984 | See Source »

...They have been denounced to the police, and a surveillance has been mounted. The dread nether god Hades decrees that twelve of the poets shall be seized by a parapolice murder gang. Can Hades be tricked into abandoning his evil intention by the underworld nymph Mintho and Hermes, the lust distracted messenger god? Are the gods, in fact taking proper care of their silly, self-important human charges? Good questions, written it seems with a shaking hand, but proof read perhaps with a hopeful, some what unpracticed smile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Summer Reading | 7/9/1984 | See Source »

Statistics show capital punishment does not deter crime. What use, then, does it hope to fulfill? Criminals don't learn lessons from being killed. Killing a criminal doesn't bring back his victim. Perhaps its purpose is not to punish a criminal's guilt but to satisfy society's lust for revenge. The late Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas wrote in his autobiography, "Capital punishment is barbaric...its only value is the organism of delight it produces in the public...

Author: By Michael N. Gooen, | Title: Barbarism at Its Best | 5/10/1984 | See Source »

Since capital punishment has been implemented by the public, it seems only reasonable that they should be privy to the process. Justice Douglas proposed a return to public stoning--not a bad idea, but if executions are televised the entire nation would have an opportunity to sale its blood-lust...

Author: By Michael N. Gooen, | Title: Barbarism at Its Best | 5/10/1984 | See Source »

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