Word: mother
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Best or worst lie you’ve ever told: I need a paper extension because my mother herniated a disc and I need to nurse her back to health. (Just kidding, I’ve never done that! But I could tell you someone...
...musical theater through singing. Growing up, Hill sang in school, but only began exploring musical theater after landing the lead role of Curly in his middle school production of “Oklahoma!” While Hill’s father grew up on Rodgers and Hammerstein, his mother was less enthused about musical theater. “My mother hated musicals. She thought they were stupid,” Hill says. “It wasn’t until she had children that she started liking musicals.” Starting in high school, Hill became serious...
...crept into his music. When he decided to pursue music as a career, Redman realized that it was time to fill the holes in his technique and started to buckle down. Until that point, Redman had been almost entirely self-taught. He grew up in Berkeley, Calif. with his mother, a dancer named Renee Shedroff. His father, though, was legendary jazz saxophonist Dewey Redman.Dewey was more a musical influence on Redman than a parental influence. Redman grew up listening to his records and seeing his father’s gigs when he played in San Francisco. When Redman decided...
...Feeling So Sad,” the inaugural production on the New College Theatre stage.Kargman has also acted in nine student films and is the co-student liaison of the Harvardwood program. Her liaison partner is also her roommate, artistic soul mate, and “mother,” Estelle L. Eonnet ’08. After being signed by the Gersh Agency last summer through connections made during the Harvardwood 101 trip she took intersession of her junior year, Kargman has taken her senior spring off of theater at Harvard to pursue professional film, television, and theater auditions...
...performers are involved in other performances over Arts First weekend, the production schedule is relaxed and relatively low-commitment. “It’s a pretty chill process,” Rich says. In the classic fairy tale chosen for this year’s production, a mother convinces a queen that her daughter possesses extraordinary spinning skills. The daughter, who is actually lazy and loathes spinning, is offered marriage to the prince as a reward for spinning an entire room full of flax in three days. The lazy daughter cheats, and as punishment for her deception...