Tag Archive | "Love"

Hole- Hungry Like The Worlf ( 2-14-95 Brooklyn, NY, Brooklyn Academy Of Music, MTV Unplugged )




 

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Kansas – Dust in the Wind @ Gibson Ampitheatre on 5/18/2010




 
Kansas performs “Dust in the Wind” @ Gibson Ampitheatre on 5/18/2010. Concert included oldies by Foreigner and Styx.

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Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) – Theatrical Trailer – © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc.




 
Film: Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Starring: Howard Keel, Jane Powell, Jeff Richards, Matt Mattox, Marc Platt, Jacques d’Amboise, Tommy Rall, Russ Tamblyn, Julie Newmar, Ruta Lee, Norma Doggett, Virginia Gibson, Betty Carr, Nancy Kilgas, Ian Wolfe, Marjorie Wood, Russell Simpson and Howard Petrie. Directed by: Stanley Donen. Story written by: Stephen Vincent Benét. Screenplay & Dialogues written by: Albert Hackett, Frances Goodrich and Dorothy Kingsley. Distributed by: © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. Theatrical Release Date: July 22, 1954 (USA) Niceties by: www.youtube.com Synopsis! “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers” is a musical film released in 1954. It was directed by Stanley Donen, with music by Saul Chaplin and Gene de Paul, and lyrics by Johnny Mercer. The script (by Albert Hackett, Frances Goodrich, and Dorothy Kingsley) is based on the short story The Sobbin’ Women, by Stephen Vincent Benét, which was based in turn on the Ancient Roman legend of The Rape of the Sabine Women. The film was a 1954 Oscar nominee for Best Picture. The film is particularly known for the unusual choreography by Michael Kidd, which makes dance numbers out of such mundane frontier pursuits as chopping wood and (most famously) raising a barn. Plot! The film’s story is about a backwoodsman named Adam Pontipee and his new bride Milly, who marries him after knowing him for only a few hours. On returning with him to his cabin in the mountains, Milly is surprised to learn that Adam is one of seven

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Itzhak Perlman plays Weiniawski’s Caprice




 
It’s a fun piece. Hope you all enjoy it too.

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The Way He Makes Me Feel




 
Caitlyn Renee singing a timeless classic form the movie Yentl. A Barbara Streisand cover. www.CaitlynRenee.com – http – www.Youtube.com www.DailyMotion.com I hope you like it. Share your thoughts with me.

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Sheena Bernett and Darling Ghost July 30th, 2010 “Between” part 2 (1).MOV




 
Sheena Bernett and her project Darling Ghost, at the Montreal show on July 30th, 2010, where she performed several of her original songs. Sheena was born in Israel, and raised in Montreal, Canada since the age of 18 months. She started singing at 4 years old, and in addition to writing her own music and lyrics, studied musical theatre on a scholarship at the American and Musical Dramatic Academy in New York City. Sheena was a student at the National Ballet School in Toronto, and is a visual artist. Sheena is part of a family of artists from Boca Raton, Florida to Montreal, including stone carvers, sculptors, ceramic artists, painters, poets, and jewelery artists. Her great-grandfather was Arthur Conner, a vaudeville singer and musician, and her great-grandmother was Fay Titleman Lipstein, a singer and dancer in the Yiddish theatre and a portrait painter. Sheena’s parents are the sculptors from Bernett Sculptors, Susan Diane Conner-Bernett, and Gary Lewis Bernett. Her grandmother is Shirley Lipstein Conner, the ceramic artist, jewelery artist and painter, and Hennie Berson Bernett, artist and Yiddish theatre singer. Sheena has a myspace page under www.myspace.com -

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Ian McEwan & Steven Pinker: A Conversation Part 6 (Final)




 
Ian McEwan is a world-renowned Booker Prize-winning English novelist and screenwriter. Steven Pinker is a Canadian-American experimental psychologist, cognitive scientist, and author of popular science. Pinker is known for his wide-ranging advocacy of evolutionary psychology and the computational theory of mind. The two discuss conversational rules of engagement; the treatment of underlings; mutual knowledge vs. innuendo; plausible deniability in platonic relationships; ad infinitum; ritual and primitive emotion; transacting intimate relationships in words; rage and desire in Joyce’s ‘The Dead’; misunderstandings about ‘The Odyssey’; and ‘Bartleby the Scrivener’ as the most annoying man in the world.

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A Valentine to Portland Center Stage




 
A short reflection of some beautiful moments over the last few years.

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