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...Melanie Marsh knows something is wrong with her son Daniel. He won't let go of his Thomas the Tank Engine train. He walks on his toes and collects objects, especially anything disk shaped. And he isn't talking. When the diagnosis comes--Daniel is autistic--Melanie's very proper English husband Stephen walks out, leaving her to feel her way forward with only a mysterious child and an army of (mostly) unhelpful doctors to guide her. This is a tearful, joyful novel, and Leimbach (Dying Young) comes by tears and joy honestly: she has an autistic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 5 of Our Favorite Picks | 4/16/2006 | See Source »

...Foreigner” tells a comedic tale of a timid British man who enters the world of the Deep South during his stay at a fishing lodge in Georgia. Depressed about his unfaithful wife back in England, a shy and insecure Charlie (Gregory J. B. Marsh, HBS) is brought to the States by his fellow British friend “Froggy” (Justin A. Monticello ’09) in an attempt to cheer him up. The play then takes on a comical twist when Froggy, in an effort to allay Charlie’s irrational fear of social...

Author: By Jennifer Y. Kan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Accents Trip Up Arthur’s Foreigner | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

...Marsh and Michael J. Laures ’09, who plays the adorable Ellard Simms, shine in their respective character renditions and deliver the most impressive performances of the production. Marsh’s excellent physical comedy and Laures’s superb role mastery both succeed in evoking a great deal of giggling and hearty laughter from members of the audience...

Author: By Jennifer Y. Kan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Accents Trip Up Arthur’s Foreigner | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

However, the failure to have all cast members master their accents is rather distracting at times. For a play that hinges on the stark contrast between Brits and Southerners, it is particularly essential to have the accents be convincing. The differences between the accents of Marsh and Monticello made it difficult to believe that their characters were both British; when juxtaposed with Marsh’s successful accent, Monticello’s accent seemed to sound questionably Australian...

Author: By Jennifer Y. Kan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Accents Trip Up Arthur’s Foreigner | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

...world overflowing with unscrupulous dealers, avaricious collectors and modernist forgeries, but his question is essentially the same. Ponders has-been Australian artist Michael Boone: "How can you know how much to pay when you have no bloody idea of what it's worth?" As Boone hails from Bacchus Marsh, Carey's birthplace, and finds himself at art's '80s epicenter in Manhattan, where the novelist has lived for nearly two decades, the question of creative worth would seem to resonate strongly with the Booker Prize winner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Literary Steal of Approval | 4/3/2006 | See Source »

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