#Exit. Pursued by a bear
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dearest-lady-disdain · 2 years ago
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at least half of shakespeare's plays would work great if the production was set it a gay bar
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mizgnomer · 3 months ago
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Behind the Scenes of The Star Beast - Part Nine
Excerpt from Emily Cook's interview with Miriam Margolyes for Doctor Who Magazine #596:
It was Tom’s Fourth Doctor, albeit in comic form, who originally encountered Beep the Meep in Doctor Who Weekly’s comic strip Doctor Who and the Star Beast, published in 1980. Ten Doctors later, the story is revived for television featuring David Tennant as the Time Lord. As fate would have it, a couple of months before she was cast in Doctor Who, Miriam had lunch with David. “A mutual friend arranged it,” Miriam explains. “I���d never met David before. I was so nervous of meeting him on my own. I was worried he’d find me boring, so I thought I better invite somebody who would be more interesting than me. So I asked Julian Clary. I thought I was going to be affecting an introduction between David and Julian, but I hadn’t realised they knew each other already because they’d previously worked together. But it was wonderful. I loved meeting David and his wife Georgia. I thought they were heavenly. Lovely people. The sort of people who you’d want to know. I think David’s an exceptional performer. I love that thing he does with the Welshman [Staged, with Michael Sheen]. That’s terribly clever. I loved Broadchurch, too. And he played the serial killer Dennis Nilsen [in Des, 2020]. He’s able to convey a reality gap with characters on the edge so profoundly. He’s quite brilliant. So just knowing him is lovely. I couldn’t believe he wanted to know me. That truly amazed me.” As part of their lunchtime conversation, David expressed surprise that Miriam had never done a Doctor Who before. She has, of course, previously voiced a Blathereen in The Sarah Jane Adventures alongside Simon Callow. “I’d forgotten I’d done that,” says Miriam. “I mean, I’ll do anything for money. I was very jealous of Simon Callow who played Charles Dickens in Doctor Who [in 2005’s The Unquiet Dead], because he’s a friend, and a great Dickens scholar.
Additional parts of this set are in the #whoBtsBeast tag. The full episode list is [ here ]
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corpusdiem-seizethedead · 8 months ago
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Husk: When I said "bring me back something from the beach", I meant like a seashell.
Angel: *struggling to hold a seagull with all six arms* Well, you didn't fucking say that!
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khaotunq · 5 months ago
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Endless Chonlatee Gifs (18/?): Khaotung Thanawat as Chonlatee (Tonhon Chonlatee, 2020)
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ekjohnston · 7 months ago
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Exit, Pursued By A Bear was always going to be my statistical outlier book. People love it so much. It moves them. It makes them feel like things will be okay. Until tomorrow, it's my only contemporary book, yet it remains the most fantasy thing I've ever written.
Pretty Furious isn't like that. I mean, I hope people love it, but it's not as simple as EXIT was. If EXIT is all the easy answers, Pretty Furious is one frustrating question after another, and the girls who are asking don't always get solutions they can work with. It's about being small and knowing the world is a big place. It's about seeing things that are wrong and being told it's not your problem, not that big a deal, or that it's not happening at all. It's wanting to fight and not knowing how. It's about making mistakes so you can learn. It's about finding the tools to grow, and realizing that you can leverage your identity to improve the world.
And it's about friendship. And family. So much family (I do not apologize for the number of characters in this book). It's about the things you try and don't repeat. It's about the things you leave behind and the things you take with you. It's about how you can change even if you decide to stay.
April 16, 2024, bookstores and libraries everywhere, ebook and audiobook too. Stay angry, little Meg. #prettyfurious
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incorrect-hs-quotes · 1 year ago
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JOHN: wait, wait, wait, go back.
[Music cuts out]
JOHN: did i say, “garden variety snail”?
JOHN: are there other varieties of snail besides garden variety?
JOHN: i don't even know why it matters, anyway…
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karlkapri · 4 months ago
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You'd hug a bear if you wouldn't die or get injured
might risk it one day. it’s how i wanna go out. in pursuit of tenderness.
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imperialweave · 1 year ago
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Yes I'm high but hear me out-
Tav and the crew are chilling around the fire, and someone brings up the most sacred claiming ritual 'if I lick it, it's mine.'
And just as Astarion starts saying some witty, vulgular quip, Tav straight up licks up the side of his face.
And then goes right back to whatever the fuck they were doing.
Thank you I'll be here all week
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pluckyingenue · 1 month ago
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Staring at Amaimon in abject horror.
"Tarrare?!"
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dearest-lady-disdain · 2 years ago
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real life footage of me whenever i think about shakespeare's the winter's tale
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and i need to point out that whatever you think the reasons are, you are probably wrong, no offence, because the cause is super specific and obscure
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shakespearenews · 1 year ago
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Exit Pursued by a Polar Bear?
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Writing in 1611, astrologer Simon Forman provides us with one of our few first-hand glimpses into early modern stagecraft. Incredibly, he talks about seeing The Winter’s Tale, but fails to mention the bear at all, focusing instead on the main action of the play and on Autolycus, a roguish peddler in the play’s second half.1
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I’ll offer two possibilities.
The first is the more obvious and also most likely: an actor could have dressed as a bear and performed the role. Kiki Lindell makes the observation that Shakespeare chose “the most humanoid of animals : a bear – virtually the only beast that a man in an animal skin can get away with imitating convincingly,” backing her observation up by referring to the “j beares skyne” listed in theatrical manager Philip Henslowe’s 1598 inventory of stage properties. 2  This could have been lent to Shakespeare’s acting company if they did not possess their own.
Moreover, Shakespeare’s bear was not the only one gracing the English stage at this time. In 1610, a revised version of the anonymous c. 1590 play Mucedorus was printed with the addition of a comical interlude wherein a Clown is scared off the stage by a white she-bear. 3  In 1611, the court masque Oberon, The Fairy Prince, included Prince Henry entering while flanked by two white bears. The Winter’s Tale completes this trilogy of ursine theater, making it possible the Bohemian bear may also have been white, both because there seemed to be a trend but also because there seems to have been a costume in circulation.
However, the specificity of the white bear leads to a tantalizing second option. What if the bear was real?
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alifeasvivid · 1 year ago
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inspired by a conversation with @disneyprincessdxminatrix and also I'm sure other people have talked about this, but... canonverse where England does things like get out his old pirate gear (a nation's personal effects never age) and dress up and does like… story times and theatre activities with kids because of course, he tells the BEST stories or maybe he gets in on amateur or local or other small venue theatre productions and he never goes out for the lead role, he always wants to play the witty side character or the antagonist and he's damn brilliant at it. Perhaps, he was even uncharacteristically unable to conceal his Puckish glee when America started talking about a certain table top game back in the 1970's and playing with him is like getting a masterclass in DM'ing.
England probably isn't the best writer, I think, particularly not when it comes to prose. He's left the refinement of the written word to his people, but he is a raconteur... a storyteller... a bard, if you will.
I think the caveat is that only his people really see this side of him. Other nations and their people would have to be extremely lucky to catch a glimpse.
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bodhrancomedy · 2 years ago
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There’s a really great post on here about the bear connection in A Winter’s Tale, but I CANNOT FIND IT.
Note: the RSC website bluntly states there wasn’t a bear and is the first thing that comes up if you google it, but they also don’t acknowledge that the Macbeth “Curse” was written by a specific guy in the 1800s either.
God, I wish I still have access to my university login for the journals.
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haveyoureadthisbook-poll · 11 months ago
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britneyshakespeare · 1 year ago
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Exit pursued by a beanie baby
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knight-in-sour-armor · 11 months ago
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