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Reproducing Georgia benefits from the high quality of its script. Although in some parts the play ties together a bit too well--the artifice occasionally shows through too boldly--it has moments of great humor and wit. Hartman has an impressive command of the wit which makes the two and a half hours of this play...

Author: By Sarah C. Dry, | Title: Flawless Acting, Careful Direction Give Passion and Sensitivity to Georgia | 3/12/1992 | See Source »

...work in Georgia. A little negative campaigning is fine; but gutter politics, unrelieved by either wit or charm, will be, and should be, rejected...

Author: By Eryn R. Brown, | Title: Scared Down South | 3/11/1992 | See Source »

...Lautrec, professionalism and unsparing wit go hand in hand. He longed for professional recognition -- and got it, at last, from the implacable Edgar Degas, who in 1893 took a hard look at his work and pronounced, "Well, Lautrec, you're clearly one of us." Practically the only area of art he never worked in was sculpture; in the rest, he crossed boundaries with elegance and fluency, turning himself into the most inventive poster artist of his age in images that seem to bridge the epigrammatic world of the Japanese wood block and the declamatory, populist one of emerging mass media...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Cutting Through The Myth | 3/9/1992 | See Source »

Tsongas's ad campaign reflects his low-key personal style -- minus his dry wit. To date, Tsongas is the only candidate in either party to abstain from ads blatantly attacking any of his rivals. But that may soon change: his media advisers are preparing a counteroffensive on the theory that in voters' minds unanswered charges amount to confessions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Campaign | 3/9/1992 | See Source »

...deserves. Barry Diller had that face by the time he was 30 and a fast-tracker at ABC. His premature baldness and stark visage gave him the look of an Edsel with the top down. And he already possessed that icy stare that made him, according to one Hollywood wit, "the last person you'd want to spill a drink on at a cocktail party." These, and a great gut for pop culture, served him well as chairman of Paramount Pictures from 1974 to '84, when it produced golden-calf movies (Grease, Flashdance) and cash-cow TV series (Taxi, Cheers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Miracle Mogul Walks Out At Fox | 3/9/1992 | See Source »

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