Word: milena
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...could filch from him a story in the public domain. He then settled down to work on script and research. The latter may be, for him, the more important undertaking. "Stanley is voracious for information. He wants glorious choice," says his associate producer, Bernard Williams. Adds Costume Designer Milena Ca-nonero: "He wants to see everything. He wants at his fingertips the knowledge, the feeling of the period...
...cast, especially to his principal trio, for establishing a delicate imbalance of mood and then duplicating that same mood a year later. Rade Markovic as Yanos conveys the full range of his character's emotions and turns of personality without losing sight of the fisherman's basically uncommunicative nature. Milena Dravic portrays the wife as simple and innocent of her husband's lust without allowing her to appear to be simply stupid. Her pleasure in having a companion forms a perfect counterpoint to Yanos turbulent feelings towards the intruding girl...
...less subtle title of How to Be have. The first and only socialist book of manners, it contains a refresher course in gentility for the comrades, who have long been taught as part of Communist dogma to regard all high manners as decadent. Its author is a Prague psychiatrist, Milena Majorová, who reminds her readers at the outset that "human beings are not polar bears -they are not satisfied with merely a female of the species and enough food...
Most sensational of the fires Djilas built was a bitter, spicy article attacking wives of big shots in the Communist hierarchy for their snobbery and rudeness toward a pretty young actress named Milena Vranjak, who recently married Djilas' friend and fellow Montenegrin, Colonel General Peko Dapcevic (TIME, Jan. 18). But more basic was a series of articles he published in Borba, the official party daily, criticizing the theories and techniques of the Yugoslav party. He attacked bureaucracy, implied that it was "enslaving" the country's productive forces, poked fun at cell meetings and urged that they be opened...
Tall, aristocratic Milena Pavlovitch Barilli was born in 1911 near Belgrade, began to paint when she was eleven. Her work hangs in the galleries of The Hague, Florence, Paris, Rome's Mussolini Museum. She claims that there is much of the early Slavic art in her painting, but that the average American does not recognize it. Few, however, could fail to recognize her as a painter in the grand manner...