Word: mouths
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...DiCara, make an unforgettable impression Reardon recalled his interview with DiCara at Boston Latin. "I said My name is Jack Reardon and he said [in a deep voice while giving a firm handshake] 'My name is Larry DiCara' and sat down One hour later I had not opened my mouth and I had to physically put him out the door. We both knew he was going to come here, but I couldn't believe he was for real...
...feel like I'm walking into the mouth of a whole. It feels great but have you ever seen what comes out of the tall of a whole...
...ectoplastic businessmen and screaming Popes, based on such then unlikely-sounding sources as pioneer Cameraman Eadweard Muybridge's serial photographs of human and animal motion, a textbook on radiology, stills from Russian Director Sergei Eisenstein's movies, and an exquisitely colored handbook on diseases of the mouth, were seen as a Guignol of existential dread. Indeed, the scariness of Bacon prevented many people from experiencing his work aesthetically: the scream on the Pope, like the smile on the Cheshire cat, remained while the rest of the picture evaporated. And yet, explains Bacon, "when I made the Pope screaming...
...couple of "major little problems" remain. "I'm an old-fashioned man," says Jimmy, blue eyes round with candor, his mouth pursed in unfamiliar primness. "My parents have been in love for 35 years, and I want to get married." His first marriage, to a dancer, ended in 1966, and he has a daughter, Tara, 10. But he wants more kids to play ball with. "Time's passing," he says moodily, and he knows that in one respect he is not moving with it. He is hung up on women's looks. "I want companionship, a woman...
...houses with immaculate lawns; Alps, pale sandstone rocks beneath pale aquamarine waves, and flowers, thousands of them, everywhere. You don't think much about politics in a setting like this, as Stavisky plays ball with Right and Left, bilking ministers in Blum's cabinet with one side of his mouth and hot-blooded Spanish grandees with the other. Stavisky and his entourage attend the famous 1933 performance of Coriolanus in Paris, and though we hear the actor declaiming his lines and listen to the applause of the fascists and the catcalls of the socialists, we never see the stage itself...