Word: one-man
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...inclined, check out the Fogg's show on 19th-century sculpture and its reproductions, but otherwise don't bother--much better shows are around. Nielsen Gallery on Newbury Street has a one-man show by VES faculty member Paul Rotterdam that should be especially interesting...
...Gulag Archipelago Firsthand. A one-man show with Yaakov Khantsis, featuring a simultaneous Yiddish translation. In the Leighton Room of Phillips Brooks House, November 20, at 6:45 p.m. Admission free...
...Many people continue to view The Merchant of Venice as, for all intents and purposes, unperformable after the Holocaust. At worst this view leads to the total suppression of an early Shakespeare masterpiece, at best to a crushing overemphasis on Shylock's role, so that the play becomes a one-man tragedy. Ask most people the name of the merchant of Venice, and they will answer "Shylock" more frequently than "Antonio." Antonio has not passed into the language as a generic term; "Shylock" is one of the most durable neologisms we owe to Shakespeare. The way that Shylock engrosses...
Schneider is more explicit about Hall's role. "It's a one-man operation," Schneider says. "He owns it. He runs it. He's the works, everything. When he goes, it goes." Schneider says Hall inherited the school from his father...
...Reactions. In three years he leaped over a city-roomful of old Times hands to become chief New York political reporter. Reeves also aroused enough jealousies to keep him from climbing further, so he quit in 1971 and became a one-man journalistic conglomerate. He wrote for both Harper's and New York, lectured at a local university, did consulting work for the Ford Foundation, was a host for a local TV talk show and took on a syndicated radio program-a regimen that brought him $75,000 a year...