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Everything posted by WilliamM
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Patti LuPone and later Bradley Cooper in Philadelphia
+ WilliamM replied to + WilliamM's topic in Live Theater & Broadway
With the exception of Elaine Stritch, Broadway performers in concert seem to be bit lost on national tours. -
No, absolutely not. I was responding to @marylander1940.
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Given @tassojunior and his past comments, he is far more than just a client. He is also a friend.
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Not always true. Some older people believe escorts can be "bought" with money and very expensive gifts, I could go on, but there is no need.
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Now I am confused. I had a close journalist friend who was murdered in South Sudan in 2017. He was 26 years old, and not an escort. I saw him frequently when he was in the US, and we kept in close touch when he was in Europe and Africa. I know his parents, his relatives as well as his close friends. But, there were things I did not know, mainly because I was 45 years older.
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Do you have a DVD player?
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Patti LuPone and later Bradley Cooper in Philadelphia
+ WilliamM replied to + WilliamM's topic in Live Theater & Broadway
Yes, I am more likely to see "Candide," despite the outrageous ticket prices. I like the musical a lot. And beyond the casts and famous narrators, Yannick Nezet-Seguin and the Philadelphia Orchestra are very important. He has replaced James Levine at the Metropolitan Opera. Yes, I know Levine and his status was reduced before he was fired (but reduced for legitimate health problems). -
Interviewing escorts for a blog does not mean @latbear4blk is close friends with the people he engages in conversation.
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That is the exact opposite of what guys have told after I got to know them well. Some older clients are significantly more demanding.
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I have not set up voice mail for my latest phone either, but I text frequently.
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"Buy property" is such a standard answer that I barely notice it anymore. Excellent advice, but it is not for everyone.
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Why No 'Literature' Section of Comedy & Tragedy
+ WilliamM replied to TruthBTold's topic in Literature
New York Times, June 2 George Will, You're organizing a literary dinner. What three writers, dead or alive, do you invite? Mr. Will: Albert Camus, whose "The Stranger" ignited my compulsive reading as undergrad from 1958-1962. "The Magic Mountain," like Camus' s "The Plague," is an exhilarating example of literature of political ideas. Also, Peter De Vries and Margaret Mead. Comment: Totally agree about "The Magic Mountain." -
http://www.actorsexposed.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Chris_Evans_real_GIF_11a.gif
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Patti LuPone and later Bradley Cooper in Philadelphia
+ WilliamM replied to + WilliamM's topic in Live Theater & Broadway
Bradley Cooper will sell tickets to those who are aware that "Candide," is far from a major musical. Tickets prices are $300 for all performances. Ugh. That is very, very unusual. -
I saw Mulholland Drive at the Castro in San Francisco with Ann Miller in the audience. She talked and answered questions after the film. This was several years after the release.
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http://66.media.tumblr.com/5baedf2802d6667973f4756d4bc51971/tumblr_pp4ojkRwMS1x4mv0io3_400.gif Richard Maddon
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The New York Times "Rocketman" It’s Going Great for Richard Madden. That’s What Worries Him May 31, 2019 When it comes to award shows, always listen to Julianne Moore. Richard Madden knows this now, though he didn’t in January, when the Scottish actor who is the co-star in "Rocketman," found himself . Madden had received his first Globe nomination for playing a British politician’s PTSD-stricken protection officer in the hit mini-series “Bodyguard,” and before the names in his category were read, Moore leaned over to strategize. “She was like, ‘O.K., sweetie, if you win, do you want to come out behind me or do you want to go around the other way?’” Madden recalled. He responded incredulously: Of course he wouldn’t win. But he did. And as the orchestra began to play, Madden had no idea where to go. With a professional’s ease, Moore stood up, stepped back and coaxed Madden past her to the stage. “And then when I came back to the table after,” he said, “she was like, “I asked you which way you wanted to go!’” I When it comes to navigating his path through Hollywood, the 32-year-old Madden prefers to figure it out on the fly. This week, you can catch him in the musical “Rocketman,” where Madden plays a cunning music manager whose seduction of Elton John extends past the boardroom and into the bedroom. It’s a far cry from Madden’s best-known role as Robb Stark, the virtuous, doomed “Game of Thrones” character who perished during the show’s notorious “Red Wedding” episode. That series only got bigger and bigger as it went on, but after his third-season exit, Madden was no longer around to partake in the spoils. Still, being killed off early has its benefits: It let Madden gradually age out of callow-prince roles and start playing complicated adult men. His role on “Bodyguard” last fall served as a reintroduction of sorts, a signal to the industry that Madden’s matinee-idol looks had grown gratifyingly flinty. Even his vulnerability now seemed dangerous. “I’m so used to playing the good guy that bad things happen to,” Madden told me in a Cannes hotel room this month, just days after “Rocketman” premiered at the film festival there. Initially tired from a day of doing press, Madden became warmer and more animated as he spoke, his blue eyes widening often for emphasis. “I was interested in playing a slightly darker character, with different motivations to him.” His “Rocketman” role, John Reid, lets Madden play the Machiavellian type with a jolt of sexual electricity: When Reid tells the young, untested Elton John, “You’re so humble, it’s embarrassing,” Madden makes his taunt sound like a come-on. “What Richard has as an actor is great weight and assuredness,” said Taron Egerton, who plays Elton John in the film. “People call it sex appeal — and hell, there’s no doubt he has that — but it’s more than that. The sex appeal is a byproduct of his strength. You feel safe around him, because he has this certainty about things.” Ask Madden about that certainty, though, and he seems startled that anyone would think he possesses it. “You have to summon the strength to try and fake it,” he said. The character of John Reid may seem like a shark, but Madden conceived him as a big bluffer working hard to conceal his nerves, “because that echoed me on set, trying to be the cool character but actually panicking underneath.” Madden has felt that sense of precariousness since he was a child actor growing up outside Glasgow, where classmates teased him relentlessly for leaving school to pursue roles. Even when Madden got his big break on “Game of Thrones,” it came with a catch: Many of his co-stars were recast after the pilot was shot, an early reminder that “you’ve got to bring your best to this show, because it’s going to go on with or without you.” Eventually, the show did just that, though not before bestowing Madden with a level of fame that surprised him. “I thought it would just be like a niche, cult show,” Madden said. “I didn’t think it was going to be, like” — he paused to think of something appropriately huge — “‘Game of Thrones,’” he said finally. Still, even that series couldn’t quite prepare Madden for the level of attention he’s received since “Bodyguard” debuted. A twisty, sexually charged action drama set against the war on terror, “Bodyguard” was a sensation in Britain when it came out last fall on the BBC (the show later debuted worldwide on Netflix), though Madden kept expecting the other shoe to drop. “You’re always waiting for it to fail, or go wrong,” he said. “I did it with every episode of ‘Bodyguard,’ thinking, ‘This will be the week where the audience turns on us and starts hating the show.’” They never did, and the frenzy kicked up by “Bodyguard” has led to new roles — Madden is soon to shoot the Sam Mendes-directed World War I drama “1917” and, it’s rumored, the Marvel movie “The Eternals” — as well as new scrutiny. Paparazzi attention has become so prevalent in London, where Madden lives much of the year, that his neighbors have started a group chat to warn the actor if any photographers are lingering outside. Tabloid interest in his personal life has increased, too: Madden, who was in a relationship with the actress Jenna Coleman until last year, has recently been photographed several times with the actor Brandon Flynn, who used to date the singer Sam Smith. Are the two men an item? “What Richard has an actor is great weight and assuredness,” his “Rocketman” colleague Taron Egerton said.CreditClement Pascal for The New York Times Madden shrugged, unbothered by the question but in no hurry to answer it, either. “I just keep my personal life personal,” he said. “I’ve never talked about my relationships.” He’s working on a way to deter paparazzi interest in who he’s seen with: “I wear the same clothes days in a row, because if it looks like the same day, they can’t run the pictures,” he said. “There’s only so many photos you can have of me with a green juice walking down the street.” He knows, though, that some actors court that kind of attention. “I’ll be at hotels and restaurants where they’ll tell you, ‘There’s paparazzi in the front, do you want to go out the front or go out the back?’” Madden said. “And you go, ‘Who wants to out the front?’ And they say, ‘Oh, quite a lot of people!’” Madden shook his head, laughing. He had been invited to the Vanity Fair party that night, one of the biggest see-and-be-seen soirees of the festival, but decided to beg off another night of flashbulbs and schmoozing. “It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” he explained. Instead, he’d opt for something more modest, satisfying no one’s appetite that night but his own. “I’m going to eat a cheeseburger in bed,” he said, grinning. Comment: Richard is likely bisexual
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I remember
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Waaay obvious: Truman Capote and surprisingly Mary Martin's husband, Richard Halliday. Mary and her first husband were Larry Hagman's parents.
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Trying to find the “right” city to move to, but so hard.
+ WilliamM replied to Mocha's topic in Questions About Hiring
I was born in Austin, and Texans always say it is the most liberal place in the state, or they mention Lyndon Johnson & civil rights But, it would not be a good place for you, @Mocha, given your travel schedule. Good luck, I hope you find a comfortable community in which to live. -
Greek tennis star Stefanos Tsitsipas got his fans talking after a bizarre social media post went viral overnight. The Australian Open semi-finalist took to Twitter to share a photograph of himself with an intriguing and rather revealing caption. "I like me better naked," Stefanos wrote. "I don't mean that in a vain way... When you put clothes on, you immediately put a character on. Clothes are adjectives, they are indicators. "When you don't have any clothes on, it's just you, raw, and you can't hide." [MEDIA=twitter]1090857797368115200[/MEDIA]
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