Word: maitland
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Warren Motley plays the love-beleagured Clarence, Jr. with a suitable adolescent hunch; particularly good are his scenes opposite the spunky but innocent Mary Skinner (Cindy Rosenthal). His younger brothers John (Scott Maitland) and Whitney (William Price Schwalbe) are also fine, though they tend at times to resort to predictable grimacing and posturing. Little Harlan (Jeffrey Manwaring) is a delightful seven-year-old--quietly cute with a minimum of the necessary saccharine. The rest of the supporting cast are fine character types, though the maids might do well by talking some of the squeal out of their crying scenes...
...long and lonely climb" seemed to stretch before Elton forever. Actually, only 36 months lay between his first meeting with Bernie and an August 1970 date at the Troubadour club in Los Angeles, where he won a tough record-industry audience with his showmanship. Says MCA Records President John Maitland: "It was one of the most spectacular openings for an unknown artist I've ever seen...
Endicott coach Barbara Maitland said she was not surprised at Radcliffe's display of power. "We've been playing weaker teams, and decided to try our luck with a stronger one," she said. Maitland said the Endicott women's unfamiliarity with Radcliffe's clay courts was a factor in the match. "I've been watching my girls slide around all day," she said...
...duly killed and demanded the rest of his $5,000 payoff. To authenticate the deal, police swarmed around Hornsby's suburban home and asked a local TV station to announce that a murder had occurred. The station complied with a bogus bulletin about a killing in a "fashionable Maitland residence." Satisfied that they had enough evidence from the various recorded Sapp-Hernandez conversations, police closed in and arrested the would-be murderer...
...dissimilarity between Maitland and Butley is that Maitland is so introspectively self-concerned that he reveals his total being, while Butley is relentlessly analytical of other people and utterly blind to himself. This inhibits the playgoer's compassion. Maitland's experiences are a distillation of pain; Butley's, merely a concentrated display of panic. Nonetheless, there is considerable pathos in Butley, for his manic verbal foolery is the despair of a man who cannot afford the respite of silence...