Word: swears
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Although the most authentic New York touch about Cagney & Lacey is the latter's Bronx accent ("I swear I'll take ya outta the game"), the relationship between the leads is canny and convincing. The pair do a balancing act: Cagney is hard bitten on the outside, a soft touch underneath; Lacey, played with subtlety and warmth by Tyne Daly, is motherly in manner but rough with the "poipatraters." The original show was canceled last spring, but CBS decided to bring it back to life in part because of a deluge of protest mail from viewers who responded...
...careful and heed the advice of the bellboys at the Sheraton El Salvador or the Camino Real in San Salvador, a fabulous spring or summer vacation is waiting for you. "I was down there in December, and I swear--if you didn't read the newspapers or listen to the radio, you'd never know there was a war going on," reports Gloria Malloy, a manager for TACA, the El Salvador an airline. "It was so peaceful in the city...
Deborah Carroll creates a prim, fragile Mary Tyrone who fusses prissily when her sons swear or her husband kisses her in public. Pathetic when she rubs her rheumatic hands, once so beautiful, she explains how morphine takes her away from the gnarled reality of those hands and her family situation: "It kills the pain. You go back until at last you are beyond its reach. Only the pat when you were happy is real." But she, like Walker, has trouble with subtle mood shifts and often flattens her role by overplaying it. When under the influence of drugs, she flits...
...going?" Mones asks. "Uh, no I'm going to be in Western Massachusetts then. But, I swear I'll be thinking of them. I've get a previous obligation. I can't I just...
...with U.S.A. planted on the front, and suddenly the scene re-erupts in the mind: sticks waved like flags, teammates hugging, a crowd in sweet tears. Odd for the summertime nation that a Winter Olympics provided such a memorable moment in sports, so memorable that half of us still swear that we beat the Russians, not the Finns, in the finals. But winter plays tricks with the senses. If we didn't know better, it would appear that 1 those people are actually traveling on their sides in a bobsled at 75 m.p.h., and sailing off a 90-meter platform...