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Ramsay's interest in saintly matters begins during boyhood in a tiny Canadian village when he meets the young wife of a hard-shell Baptist preacher. She is thought to be simple by the townspeople, and proves it to the villagers' angry satisfaction by copulating with a tramp, apparently out of pure charity, and then calmly explaining-when they are caught together-that she did it because "He was very civil. And he wanted it so badly." After that her husband keeps her tied up. She takes little notice of this restraint and continues to exist in untroubled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Solitary Voyage | 1/11/1971 | See Source »

...eliminate the tramp who is dedicated to spying on us," it said. "Let us demolish the small fry." The paper was unsigned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cambridge Teachers Want Protection Because of the Recent Bomb Threats | 11/6/1970 | See Source »

...more than two centuries, from that subversive puritan Ben Franklin to the wryly theological Charles Schulz, the nation's humorists have operated as a tolerated underground culture. They have conspired to create a fantasy world where good Americans could be as shiftless as Charlie Chaplin's tramp, as cynical as W.C. Fields never-giving-a-sucker-an-even-break, as lecherous as Groucho Marx prowling a bedroom. American humorists, in other words, have kept American puritans sane and alive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: WE ARE NOT AMUSED-AND WHY | 7/20/1970 | See Source »

...Irish Actor Jack MacGowran, in a two-hour, one-man performance called Beginning to End, assembled from Beckett's novels and cemented together with passages of his poetry, radio and stage plays. The two have extracted from Beckett's life work the single figure of the Beckett tramp, Fool without his Lear. Now the tramp was confronting his maker in rapt concentration. Intense and difficult listening: this Beckett, like a Bach sonata for unaccompanied violin, is a music compacted of roughnesses and silences, almost demanding of the audience too the explorations and repetitions of rehearsal in order...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: When Friends Collaborate | 5/11/1970 | See Source »

...Last Tape and Waiting for Godot, but no seams show. There is an incident with a white horse, another with a girl, both long ago. There is an anecdote about two old men, deep trouble, silent snowy night, also long ago. The present, for Beckett's tramp, seems a stretch of shingle beach, or a corner in Caliban's cell. There is an outrageously shaggy story about the arrangement of 16 pebbles in four pockets, which grows with mad logic from the very gleam with which MacGowran first so casually confides the notion of his "sucking stones." MacGowran...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: When Friends Collaborate | 5/11/1970 | See Source »

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