when you hit a chord that you ve hit before, or a technique you ve used before when i do, i get very nervous. and i think i ve written that i mustn t do that, somebody will catch me up on it, so to speak, it s as if somebody s saying, wait a minute, you did that in that show. into the woods was based on fairy stories like jack and the bea nstalk . sondheim s music was rhythmically complicated and harmonically sophisticated. # we ve no time to sit and dither while her withers whither, whither. # and no one keeps a cow for a friend. # artists are bizarre # fixed, cold # that s you, george, you re bizarre. one of his cleverest creations was sunday in the park with george about the painter george surratt, who is most famous painting was recreated by the characters on stage. art is not an easy thing to do. and i ve heard people say, oh, so and so s so talented,
Speaking the Truths Only the Imagination May Grasp by Stratford Caldecott
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Cheamă-ţi prietenii şi hai la Caransebeş Street Food Fest!
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A Visit to Fairyland: Shirley Barber and the romanticisation of the English countryside
Daydreams of glittering wings and the laughter of pixies. From a Visit to Fairyland by Shirley Barber
May 9, 2021
I was very young when I first encountered the work of Shirley Barber, prolific writer and artist of children’s books. The memories have largely been lost to time and I remember only snatches: being drawn into the orbit of a pink and purple hardback cover, tugging on my Mum’s jacket and traipsing through the parking lot on short, stubby legs, my new prized possession tucked proudly under my little arms.
good Lord, deliver us.
When Dante called his cantos
Commedia he saw, from a posture of comic dénouement, what troubled T.S. Eliot’s tragic sense: “in spite of” the torments that tore at Christ’s very core, “we call this Friday good.” Although Dante’s utter lostness at the onset of the
Inferno coincides with that unspeakably bleak Friday, by the time he summits Mount Purgatory and ascends heaven’s ladders to the highest celestial sphere, the action resolves in Easter Resurrection. In his letter to Cangrande, Dante contends that, in addition to their respective, distinctive dictions (the vulgar