Word: weinstock
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...projects poorly, and in dialogue overplays his gestures to the point of ridiculousness. Bobby A. Hodgson ’05 does a very good job as Walter Anderson, a CIA agent masquerading as Freddie’s agent, and Nicholas R. Adams ’03 and Matt J. Weinstock ’05 do well as the KGB details assigned to Sergievsky...
...night’s second play, The Actor’s Nightmare, George Spelvin, played by Matthew J. Weinstock ’05, the semi-amnesiac lead actor thrown into plays ranging from Hamlet to Happy Days, gropes for lines and the zipper of his costar’s dress only to deliver perhaps the most painful soliloquy in stage history. The hilariously over-acted Horatio of Christian E. Lerch, and the dead-on deadpan delivery of Winnie by Jessica M. Gordon ’02-’03, highlighted the play’s comic effect...
DIED. ARNOLD WEINSTOCK, 77, industrialist who headed one of Britain's largest conglomerates, General Electric Co. (gec), and ensured its success for 33 years; in Wiltshire, South England. Known for penny-pinching and attention to detail, Lord Weinstock was ousted from gec in 1996 and succeeded by Lord Simpson, who renamed the company Marconi plc and changed its focus to it and communications. A casualty of the dotcom and telecom crash, Marconi plc's value is now around 115 million, which is around 140 million less than what it was worth when Lord Weinstock took the reins...
...plot centers on the straight-edge love story between a British colonel, Belvile (Matthew J. Weinstock ’05), and Florinda (Anna C. Walters ’05), a young aristocrat who loves the penniless Belville, but is being forced to marry the wealthy Don Antonio (Steven A. Smith...
Walters and Weinstock are earnest in their portrayal of the brokenhearted lovers struggling to overcome seemingly insurmountable obstacles. Unfortunately, the story line is too standard and fails to match the more intriguing experiences of the other characters. The obvious plotline, however, does provide a nice framework for the play, anchoring it from beginning...