Word: tangoã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...stories of Detective Clarence “Tango?? Butler (Cheadle) and Casanova “Caz” Phillips (Snipes) are interwoven in the film. Butler is an undercover narcotics cop in the projects, who has risen to the top of the business over the past few years. However, when Phillips, Butler’s old prison buddy and formerly powerful drug dealer, gets released from incarceration, problems arise. Cheadle is as charismatic as ever, endowing his character with the most emotion and authentic passion in the entire film. Snipes, while not as strong as Cheadle, also successfully...
...major preoccupations at Harvard”: integrated study, interdisciplinarity, and internationalism. Combining the mediums of dance and musical performance with more traditional keynote lectures and panel discussions, the conference includes scholars from disciplines as diverse as dance history, musicology, literature, sociology, and anthropology. This conference explores “tango?? as a cultural palimpsest.TANGO: NOT JUST A DANCEWhen most people think of tango, the image that comes most readily to mind is that of a couple dancing. Bhabha seeks to start from this traditional conception of tango??tango as dance—and then work outwards...
...Tango?? & “Telling” Carpenter Center...
...story of Macheath. Maybe the dominance of Macheath is only due to the fantastic performance of Ballard, whose wit, presence and voice give the opera a tremendous sense of power and severity whenever he speaks or sings, or even moves. His “Pimp’s Tango?? commands the attention of both the wretched whorehouse and the captivated audience. His “Call from the Grave” is bone-chilling, even in a story that is for the most part black comedy, and his spoken-word acting is powerful and eloquent.The most thematically challenging...
...three musical numbers (one “West Side Story” medley, one takeoff on “All That Jazz” from “Chicago,” and one on “Chicago’s” “Cell Block Tango??)—yet the only words spoken were, as the scene title insinuates, “meat and potatoes,” endlessly repeated. At first this concept seems like an indulgent expansion of an actor’s exercise in which an entire conversation consists...