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While Pineda’s role as co-director will preclude her participation onstage in the BFA pieces—since she is managing the show from backstage she won’t be able to spare the hour and a half necessary to create the traditional updo and makeup required of a Ballet Folklórico dancer—she will perform in the Danza Azteca piece “El Águila.” Wearing feathers and dancing as an eagle as a performance for the Aztec gods she will take part...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Marisol Pineda '08 | 4/20/2006 | See Source »

...Cruise. So grab the first installment of the “Mission: Impossible” (1996) franchise, sit back, and… TAKE A SHOT: 1. Every time someone is either obviously wearing, or proceeds to remove, an identity-changing mask. Look into securing the services of a Hollywood makeup team in preparation for Mather Lather. 2. Whenever an incredibly stereotypical character appears. Surly Europeans of all shapes and sizes abound. 3. For each sighting of the “Tom Cruise Face.” You know; the one where he opens his mouth slightly, puts on a dead...

Author: By Nicholas A. Ciani, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Screenshots: Mission: Impossible (1996) | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...portraits beauty both in form and content. Under the Taliban, the Afghan women were willing to risk their lives to secretly run beauty salons because they valued beauty whether the public could see their face or not. In the post-Taliban Afghanistan, they are eager to learn makeup application techniques because they see the economic opportunity in the trade...

Author: By Yingquiqi C. Lei, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The Beauty Academy of Kabul | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...well-suited to the characters’ reluctant gravity. Costume designer Sabrina Chou ’09 is wise to give each sister’s black dress different-colored frills, since this both helps distinguish the actors and suggests the tumult underlying their obedient demeanors. Although the makeup is perhaps too good considering that the daughters are all supposed to be in their thirties—most of them look too young and pretty—the actors’ attention to their own makeup serves to underscore the feminine character of the play.Tom E. Osborne...

Author: By Mary A. Brazelton, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Female Cast Delivers in ‘Alba’ | 4/17/2006 | See Source »

Department of History Chair Andrew D. Gordon ’74, the caucus’s other coordinator and not a member of the advisory committee, wrote in an e-mail that the group’s makeup “reflects an appropriately wide range of views on the faculty...

Author: By Anton S. Troianovski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summers Critics to Advise Dean Search | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

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