Word: woodruff
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...under the seats is open, and between the supports, Hanson is naked, blindfolded, and frantically scribbling with chalk on glass set into the floor. A camera shot up through the glass is projected onto a screen above the stage.This action more or less sets the tone for the play. Woodruff constantly pushes the limits in his direction, filling the corners of the play with nervous movement, such as Eurydice’s constant scribbling on the walls or Orpheus’s pacing, and protracting moments like the silence when Orpheus loses Eurydice, which lasts for several agonizing but transfixing...
...award to Durang during the 14th annual Arts First celebration, a four-day festival of theater, dance, music, and film produced by Harvard students. “I think he’s one of the great iconoclast writers of his generation,” said Robert E. Woodruff, artistic director of the American Repertory Theater. “I think his humor is biting. It’s social, it’s political, truly an American voice.” Durang’s most popular plays include “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains...
WOUNDED. BOB WOODRUFF, 44, a co-anchor of ABC's World News Tonight, and his cameraman, DOUG VOGT, 46; when a roadside bomb exploded near the Iraqi armored vehicle in which they were riding while reporting a story on Iraqi soldiers; in Baghdad. Woodruff suffered a fractured skull, a broken collarbone and shrapnel wounds. Vogt had less serious head and body injuries...
...least 345 who have had amputations--a higher rate per injury than in any other modern U.S. war. Most survivors, like Braddock, are left to pick up the pieces of their lives out of public view. But last month's roadside bomb attack on ABC News co-anchor Bob Woodruff and his cameraman Doug Vogt put the war and the fate of the wounded back in the headlines--and more important, in our thoughts...
...experienced foreign correspondent, Woodruff, along with Elizabeth Vargas, was named to replaced the late Peter Jennings as anchor of the network's flagship "World News Tonight". So far, over 60 journalists have been killed in Iraq since the U.S. invasion in March 2003, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, making it the world's most dangerous war zone for newsmen. On Jan 7th, Jill Carroll, an American woman freelancer for the Christian Science Monitor, was kidnapped by a previously unknown rebel group. Her abduction was denounced by Muslim groups here in Iraq and abroad as well as by several...