Word: regina
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Strolling through Boston's North End usually means a search for either fresh fruit and vegetables or a good restaurant, not an art gallery. Still, if you are in the North End, and if Regina's pizza or some other Italian culinary delight does not lure you away first, consider travelling a few flights up at 77 North Washington Street to the Boston Visual Artists' Union (BVAU) gallery...
...ballet carpenter must find dominant quality of gesture, a strain or palette of consistent movement" in the music. Now 74, Balanchine keeps providing nourishment for his New York City Ballet and matching his inspiration to his dancers' strengths. There have been two premieres in two weeks: Ballo della Regina, to dance music from Verdi's Don Carlos, and Kammermusik No. 2, composed by Paul Hindemith in 1924. The works are not masterpieces, but they show a couple of sides of Balanchine's genius: Kammermusik is a sophisticated display of how motion can illustrate music. Ballo...
Such details could be overlooked if the acting weren't so uneven. Regina, the daughter, is written as the center of energy in the children's conflict; but Robin Lane, complete with Barbie Doll face and cocktail waitress hairstyle, gives an annoyingly superficial performance. Her flirtatious manner, exaggerated gestures, even he phrasing, are all much too predictable: she extrapolates the obvious from each line, rather than offering any emotional integrity or depth of characterization...
...cover story this week is about America's greatest newspaper, the venerable New York Times, and how it has come to flourish anew under its fourth publisher, Arthur Ochs ("Punch") Sulzberger. Many of the interviews were done by Reporter-Researcher Regina Cahill, and Associate Editor Donald Morrison, who has been running our Press section for three years, wrote the story...
...recent typical day in his office, reports TIME'S Regina Cahill, Sulzberger spent nearly a half-hour, part of it punching his pocket calculator, trying to figure out the proper severance for an employee who complained about the terms of his departure. Times Co. vice presidents filed in, and they talked acquisitions, new ventures, pending tax rulings and other financial concerns. After lunch with a local department-store executive in the company dining room (where no liquor is served, lest some guest complain that drink overloosened his tongue), Sulzberger received a delegation of Sarah Lawrence College officials angry...