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Word: sarabands (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

BRAHMS: GERMAN REQUIEM (Deutsche Grammophon; 2 LPs). "Blessed are they that mourn," softly sings the chorus, and soon the sad saraband begins ("For all flesh is as grass"). At length the black solemnity is relieved by the soaring soprano voice of Gundula Janowitz singing "I will see you again." A powerful, rhythmically relentless performance by Herbert von Karajan, the Berlin Philharmonic and the Vienna Singverein...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: May 7, 1965 | 5/7/1965 | See Source »

...Hold Your Potatoes." On through the day, Lyndon and Lady Bird moved, almost ritualistically, as in a stately saraband. To the old Johnson homestead they went, to reminisce a while about Lyndon's boyhood and to sit in the porch swing. Later they visited at the ranch of A. W. (Judge) Moursund, Lyndon's old friend and trustee of his financial interests. The President sat slumped in a living-room chair for a while and watched the election returns on television. Then, by helicopter, he and his party flew to Austin's Driskill Hotel, waded into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Fresoency: A Different Man | 11/4/1964 | See Source »

...just keeps The Unsinkable Molly Brown afloat is an unquenchable Tammy Grimes. Starting off, in potato-sack finery, half tomboy and half troll, she roars and soars ahead with her magically rusty vocal cords, her magically uncombed look, her meltable rock-candy hardness, now executing a slow, sneakered, ragamuffin saraband, now after a Denver fiasco ripping into an exuberant barefoot dance, now smashing a chair over a stranger's head, now reacting in Paris to her first taste of snails: "With that sauce, you could eat erasers." Thanks to her, Molly is dripping but undrowned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: New Play on Broadway, Nov. 14, 1960 | 11/14/1960 | See Source »

...Lesson in Love (1953) and ending with Smiles of a Summer Night (1955), in which Sweden's Ingmar Bergman (TIME cover, March 14) submits his front-line report on the war between the sexes. In Lesson, the war begins with crockery barrages. In Smiles, it ends in a saraband of sophisticated satire that the winners and the losers dance together. In Dreams, the last of the three released in the U.S., the battle rages in full fury, and Bergman zooms above the field like a happy gadfly, pranging everything in sight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures: The New Pictures | 6/13/1960 | See Source »

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