#cecily fay
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I love all the behind the scenes photos from The Star Beast because they all just make it look like The Meep is just another actor chilling between takes with the rest of the cast
I choose to believe that behind the scenes The Meep is in fact very sweet and never tries to cut in line at Kraft services.
Sometimes there really was a very talented performer named Cecily Fay in there but you know what I mean. I’m so glad DW is using that sweet Mickey money on actual physical props and costumes.
#doctor who#david tennant#catherine tate#the star beast#the meep#yasmin finney#jacqueline king#cecily fay
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Dragon Crusaders (2011)
My rating: 4/10
Probably not the worst dragon movie The Asylum has ever churned out, and churned out it has many. In fact, this one may well be one of the better ones, though of course it's still boring rubbish.
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anyway watched babes with blades yesterday i almost clicked off when i saw the shitty wigs they put the kids in in the beginning but my sister forced me to stay and oh my god im so glad she did literally best movie ever made hollywood needs to give cecily fay a bunch of money to do whatever she wants im so serious
#cecily fay the woman that you are#dancer singer songwriter writer director producer actor and malaysian martial artist#shes so fucking cool
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Upcoming Exhibition | Framing The Female Gaze at Lehman College Art Gallery
I am happy to share that I am exhibiting "A Guild of Light Shining Bright," (2020) in Framing the Female Gaze: Women Artists and the New Historicism at Lehman College Art Gallery. The Show opens October 10, 2023, and will run until January 20, 2024. Opening reception: October 18, 5 - 8 pm. The works of 45 contemporary women artists are reminiscent of paintings of women by French 19th-century male artists, then are framed by their own new views of women. Sixty works are on view in Framing the Female Gaze: Women Artists and the New Historicism at Lehman College Art Gallery, with a complementary focus exhibition at The Hall of Fame Art Gallery at Bronx Community College. The women who loom large on canvases, in photographs, prints, sculpture and collage in Framing the Female Gaze vitally connect us to political and social issues and to the cultural and social discriminations that women experience now. The works in this exhibition show how women artists today focus their gaze on both women and men. Artists are magicians: they seek subjects for their work from the past, then with new images change what we thought we knew. The artists in Framing the Female Gaze looked at the art of the 19th-century which marked the beginning of Modernism, of seeing and being seen as conscious subject matter.
The artists exhibiting work in Framing the Female Gaze include Lara Alcantara Lansberg, Lizzy Alejandro, Elise Ansel, Claudia Doring Baez, Cecily Brown, Elinor Carucci, Jordan Casteel, Bhasha Chakrabarti, Katie Commodore, Camille Eskell, Lalla Essaydi, Martha Edelheit, Rose FreymuthFrazier, Scherezade Garcia, Kathleen Gilje, Guerrilla Girls, Eunice Golden, Jenna Gribbon, Mimi Gross, Hilary Harkness, Lewinale Havette, Vera Iliatova, Ayana V. Jackson, Cheyenne Julien, Fay Ku, Yushi Li (in collaboration with Steph Wilson), Shona McAndrew, Marilyn Minter, Jesse Mockrin, Christie Neptune, Deborah Ory and Ken Browar, Phyllis Gay Palmer, Cecilia Paredes, Celeste Rapone, Arlene Rush, Julia Santos Solomon, Sylvia Sleigh, Jessica Spence, Devorah Sperber, Mickalene Thomas, Sharon Wybrants, Judith Wyer, Allison Zuckerman.
Exhibition Venues and Dates: Lehman College Art Gallery, 250 Bedford Park West, Bronx, NY lehmangallery.org October 10, 2023 – January 20, 2024 Reception October 18, 5 - 8 pm
Link: https://lehmangallery.org/framing-the-female-gaze/
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Doctor Whoquest Returns: The 60th Anniversary Specials
Oh, you thought it was all done, huh? Haven't you learned by now that Doctor Who never really goes away- it just goes into mild hibernation and then comes anew, renewed and ready for more adventures across time and space?
So, here we are again, friends: back for more this time with the 60th Anniversary Specials and a new twist in the Doctor Who-niverse: the House of Mouse has arrived and they've come with money! And you can absolutely tell! (The budget is definitely bigger, the effects more polished-- which I think is a good thing, because with HD and 4K and Super Ultra Duper 4K these days, the rough and ready charm of Doctor Who effects that you could overlook or see-through in the old days when televisions weighed a ton and a half and the picture quality was less than great was getting more and more noticeable.)
I saw some rumblings of discontent with the Disney thing was announced and my only trepidation with all of this is that Disney will somehow not learn the lessons of the MCU and think 'Ooooh, a shiny new franchise' and then drown us all in the firehose of content that will have to diminish returns of quality. Personally, I think both Marvel and Disney have learned their lesson in that regard. Star Wars was trending in that direction but seems to have backed off somewhat, so I'm less concerned about them than I was. More money is good. More possibilities are also good. I'm going to say that this is good and continue in that position until I'm proved wrong.
But, the 60th Anniversary Specials:
Where we left off was Jodi Whittaker regenerating into the 14th Doctor which is all fine, well, and good except for the fact that 14 has 10's face and nobody-- including the Doctor is quite sure why. He lands back in London- for the start of the first special, The Star Beast, where he comes across Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) who does not remember him but has a husband, Shaun (Karl Collins), and a daughter named Rose. (Yasmin Finney) Doctor Who being Doctor Who, an alien ship crashes and the Doctor goes to investigate and soon discovers that Wrarth is in pursuit of something called the Meep (Cecily Fay, voiced by Miriam Margolyes) who in a twist that is really excellent, but you should probably see coming, turns out to be the villain of the special.
In short, the Doctor is forced to reawaken Donna's memories and is expecting her to die-- but with Rose's birth, part of the metacrisis that infected her has now passed onto Rose, making it less fatal for Donna, and together, she and Rose expel the metacrisis and everything's fine- until the Doctor shows Donna his new TARDIS and she spills coffee on something, sending it spinning out of control and to destinations unknown.
(This might be my favorite special. I think it was a really clever way to bring Donna back into the series and the chemistry between Tennant and Tate is unmatched as usual. You can tell Russell T. Davies is back as well because broad hints and foreshadowing begin almost immediately. I know much was made from the 'hurr durr durr woke trans woke' crowd, but the fact that Donna's daughter was trans didn't bother me. It's not unheard of in the modern world and if it makes you feel better, you could also chalk that up to the meta crisis being part of her genetic makeup as well. If you've got memories of being multiple people of multiple genders and don't really know why, how might it manifest in you, a regular human person? My general feeling is that: if it makes sense to the story, I don't care and it made sense for the character and the story, so I don't care.)
The second special, Wild Blue Yonder really showed off the potential of what a Disney budget can do with special effects, but it also leaned into The Doctor + Companion alone on a ship where weird and frankly creepy things start to happen.
After Donna's coffee mishap, they wind up on a ship at the end of the universe and have to figure out what the heck is going on. They find robots and eventually, aliens that appear as doppelgangers of each other and grow and shrink and unhinge their jaws and attempt to eat them and get really, really big and that's a fun plot development where they have to figure out who's real and who's not and The Doctor very nearly goes off with the Not-Donna, but realizes at the last second and swoops back into save her. The doppelgangers are from beyond the Universe and want to escape and get back to where all the exciting stuff is happening- which is in the universe, there, of course, they want to do things like eat people and cause chaos, but eventually, the ship blows up and the Doctor and Donna escape and land back in Camden Mark, where they are greeted by Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbens in his final role) who is overjoyed to see them both, but warns them that danger is afoot and they need the Doctor's help to solve it.
Which brings us to the final special, The Giggle.
The Doctor and Donna are taken to UNIT, where they reunite with Kate Lethbridge-Stewart (Jemma Redgrave) and former companion and friend Melanie Bush (Bonnie Langford)-- the Doctor determines that the worldwide plague of violence is due to a video from 1925 and soon realizes that it is a very old enemy of his indeed: The Celestial Toymaker (Neil Patrick Harris.)
He traps them both in his domain of twisting mazes and puzzles and eventually the Doctor and The Toymaker play a game of cards, which The Toymaker wins- but the Doctor points out that he won their last meeting, so they're tied and The Toymaker decides on a tiebreaker in the present day and transports them back to the present day where he attacks UNIT and reasons that since he's faced two separate incarnations of the Doctor in the prior two games, he needs to face another and mortal injuries the Doctor with a laser cannon, which triggers his regeneration.
But instead of one Doctor, they split in two.
The Fifteenth Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) teams up with the 14 and challenges the Toymaker to a game of catch which they win, banishing The Toymaker from existence and sealing him in a box which is then confiscated by UNIT.
On the TARDIS, 15 tells 14 he needs to recover from the extensive traumas that his past incarnations have accumulated across their lives- and Donna points out that going back to his old face might be his subconscious way of recognizing that need and tells him to settle down with her family and to retire from traveling. 14 agrees, but doesn't want to leave the TARDIS behind-- but 15, realizing that the Toymaker's rules of play still apply, takes a mallet from the TARDIS and gives the TARDIS a smack to create another TARDIS, which he then flies off with, leaving 14 to settle down with Donna and her family.
Doctor Who gets anniversary specials really well and The Giggle might be the best of the bunch, in terms of the wider franchise. It's a nice call back to the 50th Anniversary special when 11 meets 'The Curator' (Tom Baker) who advises him that he might well be revisiting old faces in the future and this neatly makes that come true AND sets up 14 to gradually become 'The Curator' which is a nice touch. Ncuti Gatwa makes an excellent debut here (we'll discuss his first special in the next installment) and I love the return of Melanie Bush, old companion and UNIT, and the very very deep cut of bringing back The Celestial Toymaker, who hadn't been seen since 1966!
Overall: It's nice to see Doctor Who back and I'm ready for more! If I've got to rank these specials, I'd say:
The Star Beast
The Giggle
Wild Blue Yonder
I will say that all of them are really good in their own way, but I loved the return of the show in The Star Beast and The Giggle neatly answers questions and goes deep into franchise lore to get their villain- which I love! Wild Blue Yonder wasn't bad either and really embraces the weird and creepy, but it just... wasn't as good as the other two.
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Hello ! This is gonna be a alter human blog :3
Names: Yves, Saint, Adam, Wynter, Wyn, Vy, Arthur, Raymond, Lloyd, Mousse, Chruch, Ajax, Idia, Angel, Nior, Lockheart/Lockhart, Heartlock, Luvelust/Lovelust, Carnage, Gear, Sunken, Liar, Lyar, Lyre, Cardinal, Discord, Anthurium, Velvet, Time, Vierzhen, Noirt, Noire, Ein, Andras, Anwir, Doyle, Villain, Evil, Forneus, Sclera, Gadreel, Obsidian, Ezikial, Night, Vinn, Vincent, Venin, Cherno, Emmett, Anniki, Stygian, Rowan, Roman, Rory, Crimson, Aether, Gale, Jynx, Lynx, Aphra, Cecily, Alastair, Chime, Hymn, Benny, Brutus, Dimitri, Dillon, Una, Aneska, Bram, Es, Mayday, Cross, Roman, and basically any other masculine (open culture) name !!
Pronouns: He/Him, Hy/Hymn, Ae/Aer, Ky/Kyn, H♡/H♡m, Hx/Hxm, Luv/Luves ou Lo/Loves, Fai/Faint, Lace/Laces, Ti/Timid, Cro/Cross, Ki/King, Holy/Holiness, Lamb/Lambs, Fang/Fangs, Mu/Muse, Bless/Blessing, Cu/Cure, Sheep/Sheeps, Sy/Sythe, Axe/Axes, Div/Divine, Snow/Snows, It/Its, Hey/Hem/Heir, Doll/Dolls, Vi/Vir, Cy/Cyr, Purr/Purrs, Drea/Dreams, Oce/Ocean, Vae/Vem, Va/Vamp, Hea/Heart, Bun/Buns, Angel/Angel’s, Mou/Mourn. . .
Other stuff: I’m a minor, I will sometimes use a typing quirk or talk in third person, and uhm… I’m a gay-bi transmascneu failboy :3<
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My ocs + their love interest
Tag list: @ocfairygodmother @bravelittleflower @butcherofblackwater @eddysocs @foxesandmagic
#kora mikaelson#ship: stora#mildred graham#otp: your name has echoed through my mind#ship: katred#molly le fay#otp: i would die for you#ship: carly#cecily manchester#otp: i can't take my eyes off you#ship: cenedict#otp: we found a way#ship: artrid#otp: never seen love as pure#ship: bealin#ocappreciation#allaboutocs#occentral#ochub#queerocs#bridgerton oc#bridgerton ocs#toalltheocsivelovedbefore#merlin ocs#this is such a basic ass edit#lmao#i hate it#but i wanted to post someting#Ingrid
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(Transcripted lyrics by me)
In your eyes I can feel the inferno
In your eyes is the lightning that strikes me down every time
You were gone for so long, you came back stronger
To lead me into love, to lead us all
To save our souls, my warrioress
In your eyes I can feel the inferno
In your eyes is the lightning
Now I am strong just to lay by your side
Knowing I am complete now that you fight by my side
Oooh, yeah, yeah, baby
All who stand in my way must surrender
All who stand by my side, they come back braver every time
Every piece of your heart that you have given to me
Falls into the violent core, ignites the flame, so fierce and raw
Your warrioress
In your eyes I can feel the inferno
In your eyes is the lightning
And now I am strong just to lay by your side
Knowing I am complete now that you fight by my side
Oh, yeah, yeah
You are my warrioress
(I am your warrioress)
(I am your warrioress)
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1600-1700 names list
I been collecting names for my decades challenged and I decided to share it. It has a bunch of different names in alphabetical order.
Not 100% sure how accurate these names are as I’m not a historian , but I like them.
Some names are “nicknames” or a variation of the same name, like Faye is from Faith ,Orelia is from Aurelia and Sisely from Cecilia/Cecily.
Some names are Shakespearean , Puritan/Virtue names , American Colonial and perhaps a Arthurian here and there.
Female names:
Abigail
Adilene/Adeline
Adrian/Adrianne/Adriana
Afra
Agatha
Agnes
Alice
Aliena
Althea
Amanda
Amelia
Amie
Amity
Amphilis
Anastasia
Andrea
Anis
Annabell/Annabella
Anne/Anna/Annie
Anthea
Aphra
Aquila
Arabella
Artemisia
Audrey
Augusta
Aurelia
Aurinda
Aveline
Avis
Ayala
Azaria
Azoah
Barbara
Barsheba
Basilia
Beatrice/ Beatrix/Bettrys
Berenice/Bernesia/Bernessa
Bethsaby
Betty
Bianca
Blanch/Blanche
Blisse
Blythe
Bridget
Candace
Caroline
Cassandra
Catherine
Causeanger
Cecilia/Cecily/Cicely
Chantal
Charis
Charissima
Charity
Charlotte
Chloe
Christabella
Christian/Christina/Christiana
Clary
Clemencie/ Clemence/Clemency
Clorinda
Constance
Cornelia
Cressida
Cynthia
Deborah
Deodate
Desdemona
Desire
Dessorell
Diana
Dido
Dinah
Dionise/Denise
Dionyza
Divinity
Dolabella
Dolora
Dorcas
Dorothy/Dorothea
Easter
Ebotte
Edith
Edna
Edonie
Effemia
Eleanor
Elise
Elizabeth
Ellen
Ellois
Ely
Emilia
Emma
Eppie
Esther
Etheldreda
Eunice
Euphanie
Evadne
Eve/Eva
Faith
Fanny
Fanstine
Faye/Fay
Felicity/Felice
Florence
Fortune
Frances
Francisca
Fronia
Gartheride
Georgette
Georgine
Gillian
Gilot
Gonerill
Good
Grace
Grisell
Gwenhoivar
Hannah
Harriet
Haven
Helen/Helena
Henrietta
Hermione
Hester
Hezekiah
Honesty
Honor
Honoria
Hope
Humility
Ida
Idonea
Imogen
Irelee
Irene
Iris
Isabella/Isabel
Isolde
Iva
Ivette
Jacobina/Jacobine
Jane
Janikin
Jemima
Jennette/Jennet/Janet
Jeronomie
Joan
Joanna
Jocatta
Jocosa
Jonee
Joy
Joyanne
Joyce
Judith
Juliana/Julia/Juliet
Karissa
Katherine/Kathleen
Kezia/Keziah
Kitty/ Kitlyn
Kloe/Khloe
Koreen/Korinne
Laura
Lavinia
Leah
Leticia
Lettice
Love
Luce
Luciana
Lucretia
Lucy
Lydia/Lidia
Mable
Magdalen
Maggy
Magnolia
Margaret
Margery
Marian/Marion
Mariella
Marina
Martha
Mary
Matilda
Maud
Mercy
Mildred
Millicent
Milly/Millie
Mirabel
Miranda
Modesty
Monica
Muriel
Myra/Myrah
Naomi
Nazareth
Nell
Nerissa
Nola
Octavia
Odelle
Olivia
Ophelia
Orelia
Orinda
Pain
Patience
Pauline
Penelope
Perdita
Petronella
Philippa
Phillis
Phoebe
Pleasance
Primrose
Priscilla
Prudence
Rachel
Rawsone
Rebekah/Rebecca
Remember
Rhoda
Robin
Rosalind
Rosaline
Rosamond
Rosanna
Rose
Ruth
Samantha
Sarah
Saskia
Sebeliah
Selah
Selina
Silence
Silvia
Sisely
Sitha
Skyler
Sophia
Susanna
Sustillian
Sybil/Sibilla
Syntha
Tabitha
Tace
Tamar
Tamora
Temperance
Theodora
Theodorien
Theodosia
Thomasin/Thomasina/Thomasea
Timandra
Titania
Trinity
Trothe
Tryphena
Ursula
Valentine/Valentina
Valeria
Vecula
Venetia
Verely / Verily/Verity
Veronica
Viola/Violenta
Virgilia
Virginia
Virtue
Winifred
Wulfhild
Wybetha
Zelda
Zipporah
Male names:
Aaron
Abacuck
Abraham
Adam
Adlard
Adrian
Alan
Albert
Alexander
Alveredus
Ambrose
Anchor
Andrew
Annanias
Anthony
Archibald/Archbad
Archilai
Aristoteles
Arnold
Artemas
Arthur
Asa
Ashley
Atkinson
Augustine
Augustus
Austin
Bainbridge
Baldwin
Barnabas
Barnard
Bartell
Bartholomew
Bardolph
Basil
Bellingham
Benedict
Benjamin
Bennett
Bertram
Bevil
Blaise/Blais
Bradford
Brian
Cadwallader
Cesar
Charles/Charlys
Chadrick
Christian
Christopher
Chroferus/Chroseus
Ciriacus
Clement
Clifford
Conrad
Constant
Cornelius
Cosmo
Court
Cotton
Cromwell
Cuthbert
Cutlake
Cyrano
Daniel
Dary
David/Davide
Demes
Denton
Denys/Dionise
Didimus
Digory
Don
Drugo
Dudley
Ebenezer
Ebulus
Edric
Edi
Edmund
Edward
Edwin
Egedius
Eli
Elias
Ellis
Eloy
Emanuell/Emmanuel
Emericke
Emery
Emmett
Enoch
Erasmus
Ethan
Eustace
Evan
Everard
Everard
Ezrah
Fabian
Fairfax
Faustinus
Felix
Francis
Frank
Frederick
Fleance
Fulk
Gabraell/Gabrell/Gabriel
Galileo
Gamalie
Garmayne
Garnett
Gavan/Gawen
Gentile
Geoffrey
George
Gerlick
Gerrard
Gideon/Hedeon
Gilbert
Giles
Gillam
Gobind/Govind
Goodwell
Godfrey
Gottlieb
Goughe
Gregory
Grenville/Grevill
Griffin/Griffith
Guy
Hamond
Hannibal
Hansse
Harman
Harry
Harvard
Hector
Helegor
Henry
Hercules
Herrick
Hieronimus
Hiram
Hobbes
Holland
Howell
Hugh
Humphrey
Ilia
Ingram
Isaac
James
Jarret
Jasper
Jenkin
Jeremiah
Jeremy
Jerome
Jesse
John
Jonathan
Joos
Jordan
Joseph
Joshua
Josias
Justinian
Kaherdin
Karl/Karel
Kenelm/Kenhelm
Kip
Kolby
Lambert
Lancelot
Lawrence
Leonard
Lewis
Lucas
Lynoell/Lionel
Machutus
Manasses
Mark
Marmaduke
Martin/Marton
Matthew
Maurice/Morrice
Melchior
Meredith
Michael
Miles
Morgan
Moses
Nathaniel/Nathaniell/Nathan
Newton
Nicholas
Ninion
Nivinius
Noah/Noe
Noble
Octavius
Odnell
Oliver
Osmund
Ostyn
Oswin
Oswold
Ottewell
Owen
Paschall
Patreas
Paul
Pawll
Percivell/Pesevwell
Peter
Phillip
Pierce/Piers
Phineas
Prospero
Quince
Quinton
Quivier
Ralph
Randall
Randolph
Raphael
Rees
Reginald
Renold
Reyvell
Richard
Robert
Roger
Roland
Roman
Royal
Rymon
Salamon
Sampson
Samuel
Sander
Schuyler
Sebastian
Seraphim/Seraphimus
Septimus
Seth
Shadrick
Silvester
Simon
Simond
Stephen
Taz
Ted
Tedde
Thadeus
Theodosius
Thomas
Timothy
Titus/Tito
Tobias
Trenton/Trentin
Tristram
Tunstall
Turner
Ucentius
Umfray
Uswald
Valor
Valentine
Vandyke
Vaugn
Vernon
Victor
Vincent
Walter
Warham
Watkin
Wiggett
Wilfred
Willing
William
Wine
Wombell
Wymond
Zachary
Zephaniah
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La Lega è quella che fa comizi con la bambola gonfiabile di Laura Boldrini sul palco. La Lega è quella che ha dato dello scimpanzé a Cecilie Kienge. La Lega è quella che guarda a Orban e alla Le Pen come modelli. La Lega è quella che ha fatto manifestazioni insieme a Casa Pound. La Lega è quella che ha detto che se si possono sposare due uomini, "poi i gay chiederanno di sposarsi con il loro cane" La Lega è quella che vuole la giustizia fai da te con un idea di legittima difesa abberrante. La Lega è quella che ha fatto sparire 49 milioni di euro. La Lega è quella che su Capitol Hill non ha detto una parola. La Lega è quella che disinfetta i treni dove si siedono ragazze nigeriane. La Lega è quella che parla di teorie gender nelle scuole. La Lega è quella che bradisce crocefissi e rosari ad ogni adunata. La Lega è quella che ha lasciato per giorni gente stremata nei porti per farci sopra campagna elettorale. Forse non sarete d'accordo con me .. Ma io non voglio che quel po' di sinistra che è rimasta in Italia governi con questa gente.. Nakia Gardini Fanpage
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If that's all there is my friends, then let's keep dancing
Je n’ai pas du tout écrit pendant les vacances. J’ai écrit dans ma tête. Je tournais mes phrases et je les réécrivais, allongée dans l’eau, je regardais les nuages qui défilaient en chantonnant Is that all there is ? de Peggy Lee. Je voyais tous ces gens se confier sur leur impossibilité à couper, à arrêter le travail. Je complexais presque de tout débrancher si facilement : l’écriture, la lecture, la réflexion. Simplement essayer de manger des glaces en tentant de ne pas (trop) penser à la fin du monde me semblait déjà une tâche suffisamment ardue pour les vacances.
Dans cet espace mental où sont stockés des tas d’écrits jamais couchés sur le papier, je réfléchis depuis quelques années à un livre que je ne concrétiserai (probablement) jamais sur la comédie musicale. À chaque fois que j’en vois une, j’en ajoute un chapitre. C’est un long récit personnel sur tout ce que ce genre m’a apporté personnellement, sur la manière dont le chant et la danse augmentent la réalité et dessinent les contours des sentiments.
Le postulat de la série Schmigadoon ! (dispo sur Apple TV+) ne pouvait, en somme, que me plaire : un couple en pleine dispute se retrouve propulsé dans un univers parallèle, dans lequel tout le monde chante et danse dans des décors de cinéma. Les mentalités, elles aussi, sont très proches de l’âge d’or de la comédie musicale. La série s’inspire de Brigadoon de Vincente Minnelli, qui raconte de la même manière l’histoire de deux amis qui se retrouvent coincés dans une sorte de monde féérique écossais-kitsch. Je pense très souvent à Brigadoon parce qu’il est pour moi la métaphore d’un univers imaginaire fertile, d’un monde alternatif et supportable que l’on s’imagine pour survivre. Et ce film est aussi, dans mon récit fictif, une porte d’entrée dans la comédie musicale. Comme les personnages du film, rentrer dans un musical rend possible l’ouverture d’une parenthèse enchantée.
Schmigadoon ! n’aurait pas eu beaucoup de sens si, en 2021, il n’avait offert comme postulat que la plongée dans un monde merveilleux, chantant et dansant et que l’histoire s’était arrêtée là. Dans le couple, formé par Keegan-Michael Key et Cecily Strong, deux camps s’affrontent : l’une, acquise au monde magique du musical et l’autre complètement hermétique à ces énergumènes qui se mettent à chanter au moindre mouvement de leurs cœurs et de leurs émotions (tout comme dans Brigadoon, dont le duo principal compte, comme souvent, un cynique et un idéaliste). Si je n’étais pas moi-même une telle fan de comédie musicale, j’aurais pu m’agacer que le personnage féminin soit si romantique, occupée à espérer un amour idéal. Mais le jeu franc et sans détours de Cecily Strong m’a immédiatement acquise à sa cause et je crois que la série réfléchit plus profondément qu’il ne le paraît à la manière dont la fiction infuse notre quotidien et nous fixe, parfois, des standards impossibles. (j’attends toujours de pouvoir chanter dans la rue, mais à part le playback occasionnel autorisé par le masque, on est loin du compte)
Récemment, j’ai vu le film de John Cassavetes Minnie et Moskowitz dans lequel Gena Rowlands a une longue tirade merveilleuse sur les mensonges de la fiction. Le cinéma lui a fait croire à une histoire d’amour parfaite, à des relations qui n’existent pas. Movies are a conspiracy. Schmigadoon ! ausculte justement une relation en lui faisant passer, tour à tour, le test de la fiction et celui de la réalité. Dans les scènes musicales, le couple ne tient pas la route, il n’arrive pas à se caler comme les autres dans des numéros parfaitement chorégraphiés. Pourtant, pendant tous les flashbacks de la vie de ces deux médecins, qui rythment la série, on comprend que leur relation a sa propre beauté. Pas une perfection hollywoodienne, mais une magie quotidienne qui se noue autour d’un distributeur de barres de céréales, qui doit composer avec le monde (pourri) dans lequel nous devons bien vivre. Et doit-on souhaiter de trouver Brigadoon/Schmigadoon, ou essayer d’enchanter nos quotidiens ?
Alors que l’on a beaucoup (trop) parlé ces dernières années du soi-disant problème de relire les œuvres avec un regard contemporain, Schmigadoon ! propose une lecture sensée du problème : aimer toutes ces œuvres, d’accord, mais la fiction, comme tout idéal, peut changer. Tout en rendant un hommage amoureux à la comédie musicale (et si vous aimez le genre, vous trouverez plein de clins d’œil aux classiques du genre), Schmigadoon ! se moque des clichés et des codes du musical : du bad boy, du numéro de ballet qui arrive comme un cheveu sur la soupe, des sous-textes gay qui cette fois sont explicités (Alan Cumming est, encore une fois, fantastique)… Et Schmigadoon ! réussit à remettre en perspective les valeurs parfois rétrogrades portées par Hollywood (sur l’avortement, sur le casting majoritairement blanc des musicals les plus populaires, sur l’homosexualité, sur la politique…) en proposant son twist contemporain.
J’étais vraiment heureuse de regarder Schmigadoon ! au cœur de cet été sombre, de voir ces décors colorés, ces numéros un peu kitsch, de constater l’alchimie de Cecily Strong et Keegan-Michael Key. De voir que ce dernier sait me faire pleurer de rire et juste pleurer tout court. C’est une série pleine de bons sentiments, et ça tombe bien, j’adore ça. Je lisais un excellent article hier dans le New Yorker sur le fait que I think you should leave de Tim Robinson est un love language. Je suis en général assez fascinée par le langage que l’on crée avec les personnes que l’on aime, fait d’allusions communes, de private jokes, de souvenirs évoqués en un mot et dans mon cas de blagues bêtes. La comédie musicale est, sans conteste, mon propre love language. J’y fais souvent allusion et, dans mon petit récit interne, il y a toujours une scène qui fait écho à une joie ou une peine. Je ne spoilerai pas la fin de la Schmigadoon!, mais le dernier épisode m’a arraché des larmes. J’ai pensé à mon propre sidekick, avec qui je partage aussi bien des blagues de I Think You Should Leave que les dizaines (++) de comédie musicale qu’il a regardé à mes côtés en subissant mon regard niais.
Quelques jours avant de finir Schmigadoon ! j’ai vu le film d’Agnès Varda Jacquot de Nantes réalisé avant le décès de Jacques Demy et qui raconte la jeunesse de ce dernier et les sources d’inspiration de son œuvre. Je n’étais pas forcément passionnée par les reconstitutions de ce Nantes de son enfance, par contre j’étais très émue par les longs plans sur son visage d’homme, sur lequel on décelait déjà la maladie et la mort imminente. Je pensais à tous ces mondes qu’il m’a offert, à la fantaisie, à la profondeur, à la beauté, à tout ce qu’il portait et qu’il a eu la bonté de partager. Ces brigadoon que nous abritons en nous. Il faut s’en méfier – dehors, evil breaks its chains and runs through the world like a mad dog disait l’oncle dans Fanny et Alexandre – mais peut-être que l’on peut quand même prendre quelques instants pour s’y lover.
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i see you have quite a few wips! which one has been your favorite/easiest to write in recently? tell me some things about it that you haven't had the chance to talk about yet!
i do have a ton of wips, thank you for noticing my utter lack of control! my fave wip to be writing lately is this one, and in particular i’ve been thinking about hurly burly, the witchy part! so i’m gonna tell you about the characters in that. we have:
lux, light witch & coven leader. appears to be keeping it together from a distance, but when you zoom in you’ll notice she’s extremely stressed.
ash, edgy pyro-witch. fiercely loyal and devoted to lux as only a lesbian with a best friend that she’s hopelessly in love with can be. chronic foot in mouth disease and wary of strangers.
piper, very old. possibly immortal. may have once been known as morgan le fay.
cecily, fledgling witch with a huge amount of power but very little control. eg: she tried to show her boyfriend a simple candle-lighting spell and she killed him instead 🙊
emrys, said deceased boyfriend. he’s back now, but still feeling the effects of his brief time in the underworld. he’s becoming more and more of an eldritch horror show, tbh
persephone, who hides her soft side under a no-nonsense exterior. she considers it her duty to uphold the balance of witchcraft, and views resurrection of emrys as an abomination that goes against everything witches ought to stand for.
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Stopařův průvodce po galaxii
Víte, kdo jsou nejinteligentnějšími bytostmi na planetě Zemi? Kdepak, lidé to nejsou. A ani delfíni, ti jsou druzí nejchytřejší, a proto dokázali utéct ze Země těsně před jejím zničením. Anebo to aspoň tvrdí Douglas Adams, autor stejnojmenné kultovní knižní předlohy pro Stopařova průvodce po galaxii.- Více na https://www.kritiky.cz/filmove-recenze/retro-filmove-recenze/2019/stoparuv-pruvodce-po-galaxii/
#Retro filmové recenze#Alan Rickman#Anna Chancellor#Ben Uttley#Bill Bailey#Bill Nighy#Cecily Fay#Edgar Wright#Garth Jennings#Helen Mirren#John Malkovich#Kelly Macdonald#Martin Freeman#Reece Shearsmith#Sam Rockwell#Simon Jones#Spencer Wilding#Stephen Fry#Steve Pemberton#Thomas Lennon#Vanille Attié#Warwick Davis#Yasiin Bey#Zooey Deschanel
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Interview with Julie Leung
Merlin's Last Quest, the third and final volume of the Mice of the Round Table series, is out today! To celebrate we're hosting several giveaways of Julie Leung's favorite Middle Grade books over on our Twitter, as well as a chance to win the whole Mice of the Round Table series, and we have an interview with the author herself!
You can buy it on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository, Indiebound, or wherever books are sold. We hope you enjoy the book and the interview with Julie!
What was the Inspiration for Mice of The Round Table?
I wanted to blend everything I loved about Redwall and Arthurian legends into one place, one playground universe where I could reshape the classic tales from a new perspective.
What can readers expect in the last installment?
The various seeds planted in Books 1 and 2 finally blossom. I’ve been building to this final showdown for years, and Camelot’s ultimate fate hangs in the balance.
What journey have you, as an author, experienced while writing this series?
Well, I grew my first gray hairs for one thing. Is that a journey?
Looking back on your writing journey, is there anything you would have done differently?
Gotten more sleep.
What advice would you give aspiring writers?
There is a time for drafting and a time for editing. Don’t try to do both simultaneously.
What characters from the MOTRT series have you grown exceptionally fond of, or that surprised you in some way?
I love my bird characters, especially Thaddeus from the first book which I modeled after Zeus, a real-life blind owl with galaxies in his eyes.
What book recommendations would you give people who loved MOTRT?
I’m going to sound like a broken record, but what else can I say besides the Redwall series by Brian Jacques?
Do you have any new stories you are itching to tell after MOTRT? If so what are they?
My next books are nonfiction. I’m working on picture books about Chinese-Americans, the first one about the artist Tyrus Wong. I’m also writing an anthology about famous firsts in STEM fields.
Is there anything else you want your readers to know about the final installment/the MOTRT series?
Get your tissues ready!
If you could have dinner with any three authors Arthurs, who would they be?
Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur, the aardvark Arthur, king of the Britons ;)
If time stopped, which book would you read over and over again?
The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster, and illustrated by Jules Feiffer.
Which 3 fictional characters would you want to have an adventure with?
Lyra Belacqua, Gandalf, Tyrion Lannister.
Do you want to recommend any books, comic books, podcasts, games, TV shows, anything that you’re enjoying right now?
Books: The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin Comic Books: SAGA, Monstress Podcasts: Lore Board Games: Dragoon TV: Glow, Star Trek: Voyager
MERLIN'S LAST QUEST - MICE OF THE ROUND TABLE
The thrilling conclusion to the epic middle grade fantasy series that Booklist called “a charming blend of Arthurian legend and Brian Jacques’ Redwall series.”
Young mouse Calib Christopher is finally a squire to the Knights of the Round Table. But there is no time to celebrate. His best friend, Cecily, and Merlin’s magical treasure are in the clutches of the evil Saxons.
Now Calib and his human companion Galahad must venture into enemy territory to rescue both before it’s too late. But Morgan le Fay’s magic is powerful and treacherous, and it will test all that they have learned in their training—as well as their very allegiance to Camelot.
The stars are aligning for a final battle—one that will require Calib and his friends to harness the magic of Merlin as well as the strength, bravery, and wisdom within themselves to become the mythical heroes they were destined to be.
Perfect for fans of New York Times bestselling series like Wings of Fire and Warriors, Mice of the Round Table brings to life a legendary world of animals and magic that kids will want to return to again and again.
#books#bookworm#book lover#booklr#Glasstown Entertainment#interview#Julie Leung#Mice of the Round Table#Merlin's Last Quest#MG#Middle Grade#Fantasy
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Title: Warrioress (15) Year: 2011 Running Time: 92 minutes Director: Roy Boyask Cast: Cecily Fay (Boudiccu), Joelle Simpson (White Arrow), Helen Steinway Bailey (Djahn) Notes: None Rating: 2 Thoughts: Two female warriors must travel across the land to fight a duel in a stone circle. If their skills are even they will meet a prophecy and unite the people to revolt against the Falonex Empire. This film appears to have one purpose, to showcase the exotic skills of actor and writer Cecily Fay. When she fights it is generally impressive as she uses all four feet nine inches to full effect. But there is a lot of fighting! Sadly they fill the gaps with dialogue. This is poorly written and even more poorly delivered. The fight scenes see even more noise, akin to a women's tennis Grand Slam final rather than a battle. There's way too much yelping! It's an unconvincing story that is fairly obvious, and the predictable script gets no help from the actors. The fight scenes, yelps aside, do have some good moments but the scope of the film is very limited.
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