Word: moodã
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...film suffers from a haphazard and disorganized structure; the shaky cinematography is positively migraine-inducing; and the “mood?? lighting simply worked to obscure any attempt to discern what was happening. Stage Beauty opens with Maria (Claire Danes) standing wistfully in the wings while watching a performance of Othello’s Desdemona by her employer, London’s “leading lady” Ned Kynston (Billy Crudup). She mouths his lines with practised passion, for despite a ban on female actresses in public theater, Maria—surprise, surprise—harbors...
...17th century theater, the film reel—quite literally—burned up. But the twenty-minute pause required for repairs was hardly a change of pace. The film suffers from a haphazard and disorganized structure; the shaky cinematography is positively migraine-inducing; and the “mood?? lighting simply worked to obscure any attempt to discern what was happening...
...Fireplace Ban, Ignites Controversy”), there is a report that fires in fireplaces in Harvard student rooms will no longer be permitted. When I was an undergraduate, we used the fireplaces, and some years we used them frequently. They were often used to provide a “mood?? for Friday and Saturday night parties. Over the years since then, I have occasionally shuddered to think of the risks that actually occurred. The fires were usually large and blazing. The fires were often stoked by students who had been drinking, and the fires were sometimes left...
...second weekend, however, in order to see Side Man in the Ex Nov. 9-16, produced by Alex Kanter ’05. If you’ve ever wondered about those cool cats responsible for making Glenn Miller’s “In the Mood?? the most overplayed high school jazz band song, seeing Side Man is a no-brainer. Warren Leight’s play is a touching look at the effects of the erosion of big-band jazz on its quirky performers. Even if you were beat up in high school for being...
...course, country music is tacky and sappy and simplistic and sung in a Southern accent. And of course it’s tailored to a certain mood??like cruising down a nearly-empty highway, with only a harmless-looking Ford Expedition for company. But it’s also an entertaining and uniquely American art form, written in the language of our vast country— the language of pickup trucks and open roads, of cowboys and honky-tonk bars...