Word: renauds
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...third has ten doorknobs, with only one that works, and the final door pivots around a central pole instead of opening on hinges. Also, the grid pattern on the floor is warped, giving it the general effect of an M.C. Escher painting, according to the assistant director, Julia L. Renaud ’09. “The set overall reflects the unstable or skewed logic of the characters who are inhabiting it,” Pastel says. Animations, designed by Grace C. Laubacher ’09, will be projected on stage intermittently throughout the play, adding...
...gave them the opportunity to attend better schools. “That’s crap,” Brown-Trickey said after the film. “They simply believe in their intellectual inferiority at Central.” Co-director and co-producer of the film, Craig Renaud, an alumnus of Little Rock Central, said before the screening that the film reflects national themes. “Many people were saying that they experience the same thing as in Little Rock,” Renaud said. “Opinions on the topic of race and segregation will...
...Royal could attract almost half of them, while Sarkozy is the remaining choice for only a quarter. Yet some of them are bound to resist any lures from either Sarko or Ségo. "Both of them talk about protecting us - the mother protector and the father protector," says Renaud Gaultier, an industrial designer in Paris. "I have a mother and father; I'm an adult, and I don't need this infantile discourse." Gaultier says he'll drop an unmarked ballot into the box on May 6, and he won't be the only Bayrou adherent to exercise that...
...Pastel ’09) in honor of her husband Lars (Arlo D. Hill ’08) and the success of his philosophical self-help book. Their conversation starts out icy and is not improved by the arrival of Lars’s ex-lover Wynne (Julia L. Renaud ’09), whose husband has dumped her earlier that day, and the newlywed couple Hal (Simon N. Nicholas ’07) and Sian (Catrin M. Lloyd-Bollard ’08). Paige—with the help of a silent and frighteningly obedient waiter chillingly played...
...dinner party to celebrate the publication of his Nietzschean empowerment/philosophy text. Invited guests include: Hal, the biologist (Simon N. Nicholas ’07); his wife Sian, the “newsbabe” (Catrin M. Lloyd-Bollard ’08); and Wynne, the dumb blonde (Julia L. Renaud ’09). It soon becomes apparent from Paige’s neurotic preparations and treatment of the guests as they arrive that she has ulterior motives. As the night goes on, conditions both inside and outside the house worsen, allowing a view of everyone’s quirkier...