#timothy h lee
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Hadestown has been open on Broadway since 2019 and for the first time ever, today, Orpheus was played by an Asian man. This was truly a special show. Asian characters are always the pragmatic ones. Straight forward thinkers who don’t get to be dreamers. Getting to an Asian man as a hopeful dreamer whose music moved people is something I really needed.
First Asian Orpheus on Broadway fun fact.
Everytime I see this show, it finds new meaning in the world we live in and today was no different.
54 notes
·
View notes
Text
Donald Sutherland
Commanding and versatile actor known for his roles in MAS*H, Don’t Look Now and The Hunger Games
Donald Sutherland, who has died aged 88, brought his disturbing and unconventional presence to bear in scores of films after his breakthrough role of Hawkeye Pierce, the army surgeon in Robert Altman’s M*A*S*H (1970), one of the key American films of its period. It marked Sutherland out as an iconoclastic figure of the 60s generation, but he matured into an actor who made a speciality of portraying taciturn, self-doubting characters. This was best illustrated in his portrayal of the tormented parent of a drowned girl, seeking solace in a wintry Venice, in Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now (1973), and of the weak, nervous, concerned father of a guilt-ridden teenage boy (Timothy Hutton) in Robert Redford’s Ordinary People (1980).
Although Sutherland appeared in the statutory number of stinkers that are many a film actor’s lot, he was always watchable. His career resembled a man walking a tightrope between undemanding parts in potboilers and those in which he was able to take risks, such as the title role in Federico Fellini’s Casanova (1976).
Curiously, it was Sutherland’s ears that first got him noticed, in Robert Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen (1967). During the shoot, according to Sutherland, “Clint Walker sticks up his hand and says, ‘Mr Aldrich, as a representative of the Native American people, I don’t think it’s appropriate to do this stupid scene where I have to pretend to be a general.’ Aldrich turns and points to me and says, ‘You with the big ears. You do it’ … It changed my life.” In other words, it led to M*A*S*H and stardom.
Sutherland and his M*A*S*H co-star Elliott Gould tried to get Altman fired from the film because they did not think the director knew what he was doing due to his unorthodox methods. In the early days, Sutherland was known to have confrontations with his directors. “What I was trying to do all the time was to impose my thinking,” he remarked some years later. “Now I contribute. I offer. I don’t put my foot down.”
Sutherland, who was born in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada, was a sickly child who battled rheumatic fever, hepatitis and polio. He spent most of his teenage years in Nova Scotia where his father, Frederick, ran a local gas, electricity and bus company; his mother, Dorothy (nee McNichol), was a maths teacher. He attended Bridgewater high school, then graduated from Victoria College, part of the University of Toronto, with a double major in engineering and drama. As a result of a highly praised performance in a college production of James Thurber’s and Elliott Nugent’s The Male Animal, he dropped the idea of becoming an engineer and decided to pursue acting.
With this in mind, he left Canada for the UK in 1957 to study at Lamda (the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art), where he was considered too tall and ungainly to get anywhere. However, he gained a year’s work as a stage actor with the Perth repertory company, and appeared in TV series such as The Saint and The Avengers. He was Fortinbras in a 1964 BBC production of Hamlet, shot at Elsinore castle and starring Christopher Plummer. He also appeared at the Criterion theatre in the West End in The Gimmick in 1962.
In 1959 he married Lois Hardwick; they divorced in 1966. Then he married the film producer Shirley Douglas, with whom he had twins, Kiefer and Rachel; they divorced in 1971. Kiefer, who grew up to become a celebrated actor, was named after the producer-writer Warren Kiefer, who put Sutherland in an Italian-made Gothic horror film, The Castle of the Living Dead (1964). Christopher Lee played a necrophile count, while Sutherland doubled as a dim-witted police sergeant and, in drag and heavy makeup, as a witch.
In an earlier era, the gawky Sutherland might not have achieved the stardom that followed the anarchic M*A*S*H, but Hollywood at the time was open for stars with unconventional looks, and Sutherland was much in demand for eccentric roles throughout the 70s.
He was impressive as a moviemaker with “director’s block” in Paul Mazursky’s messy but interesting Alex in Wonderland (1970), which contains a prescient dream sequence in which his titular character meets Fellini. In the same year, Sutherland played a Catholic priest and the object of Geneviève Bujold’s erotic gaze in Act of the Heart; he was the appropriately named Sergeant Oddball, an anachronistic hippy tank commander, in the second world war action-comedy Kelly’s Heroes; and he and Gene Wilder were two pairs of twins in 18th-century France in the broad comedy Start the Revolution Without Me.
Sutherland was at his most laconic, sometimes verging on the soporific, in the title role of Alan J Pakula’s Klute (1971), as a voyeuristic ex-policeman investigating the disappearance of a friend and getting deeply involved with a prostitute, played by Jane Fonda.
Sutherland and Fonda were teamed up again as a couple of misfits in the caper comedy Steelyard Blues (1973). It initially had a limited distribution due mainly to their participation together in the anti-Vietnam war troop show FTA (Fuck the Army), which Sutherland co-directed, co-scripted and co-produced.
Sutherland always made his political views known, although they surfaced only occasionally in his films. In among the many mainstream comedies and thrillers was Roeg’s supernatural drama Don’t Look Now, in which Sutherland and Julie Christie are superb as a couple grieving their dead daughter. Despite the dark subject matter, the film was notable for containing “one of the sexiest love scenes in film history”, according to Scott Tobias in the Guardian, the frank depiction of their love-making coming “like a desert flower poking through concrete”. The actor so admired Roeg that he named another son after him, one of his three sons with the French-Canadian actor Francine Racette, whom he married in 1972.
John Schlesinger’s rambling version of The Day of the Locust (1975) saw Sutherland as a sexually repressed character – called Homer Simpson – who tramples a woman to death in an act of uncontrolled rage. Perhaps Bernardo Bertolucci had that in mind when he cast Sutherland in 1900 (Novecento, 1976), in which he is a broadly caricatured fascist thug who shows his sadism by smashing a cat’s head against a post and bashing a young boy’s brains out. “And I turned down Deliverance and Straw Dogs because of the violence!” Sutherland recalled.
In Fellini’s Casanova, the second of his two bizarre Italian excursions in 1976, Sutherland coldly calculates seduction under his heavily made-up features. The performance, as remarkably stylised as it is, still reveals the suffering soul within the sex machine.
In 1978 he appeared in Claude Chabrol’s Blood Relatives, a made-in-Canada murder mystery with Sutherland playing a Montreal cop investigating the murder of a young woman. More commercial was The Eagle Has Landed (1976), with Sutherland, attempting an Irish accent, as an IRA member supporting the Germans during the second world war, and as a chilling Nazi in Eye of the Needle (1981). Meanwhile, he was the hero of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), who resists the insidious alien menace until the film’s devastating final shot.
In 1981 Sutherland returned to the stage, as Humbert Humbert in a highly anticipated version of Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, adapted by Edward Albee. It turned out to be a huge flop, running only 12 performances on Broadway. Both Sutherland and Albee played the blame game. “The second act is flawed,” Sutherland said. “Albee was supposed to have rethought it, but he never did.” Albee told reporters that he had scuttled some of his best scenes because they were “too difficult” for Sutherland because “he hasn’t been on stage for 17 years”.
Continuing his film career, Sutherland played a complex and sadistic British officer in Hugh Hudson’s Revolution (1985), and in A Dry White Season (1989) he took the role of an Afrikaner schoolteacher beginning to understand the brutal realities of apartheid. In Oliver Stone’s JFK (1991), he held the screen with an extended monologue as he spilled the conspiracy beans to Kevin Costner’s district attorney hero Jim Garrison.
After having made contact with young audiences in the 70s with offbeat appearances in gross-out pictures The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977) and National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978), the latter as a pot-smoking professor, he was cast as an unconvincing bearded stranger in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992).
On a more adult level were Six Degrees of Separation (1993), in which he played an unfulfilled art dealer; A Time to Kill (1996), as an alcoholic, disbarred lawyer (alongside Kiefer); Without Limits (1998), as an enthusiastic athletics coach; and Space Cowboys (2000), as an elderly pilot. By this time, he was gradually moving into grey-haired character roles, one of the best being his amiable Mr Bennet in Pride and Prejudice (2005).
The Jane Austen novel was also featured in the television series Great Books (1993-2000), to which Sutherland lent his soothing voice as narrator. Other series in which he shone as quasi baddies were Commander in Chief (2005) – as the sexist Republican speaker of the house opposed to the new president (Geena Davis) – and Dirty Sexy Money (2007-09), in which he played a powerful patriarch of a wealthy family.
Sutherland continued to be active well into his 80s, his long grey hair and beard signifying sagacity, whether as a contract killer in The Mechanic, a Roman hero in The Eagle, a nutty retired poetry professor in Man on the Train (all 2011), or a quirky bounty hunter in the western Dawn Rider (2012), bringing more depth to the characters than they deserved. As President Coriolanus Snow, the autocratic ruler of the dystopian country of Panem in The Hunger Games (2012), Sutherland was discovered by a new generation; he went on to reprise the role in three further films in that franchise, beginning with The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013).
He played artists in two art-world thrillers by Italian directors: in Giuseppe Tornatore’s Deception, AKA The Best Offer (2013), he was a would-be painter helping to execute multimillion-dollar scams, while in Giuseppe Capotondi’s The Burnt Orange Heresy (2019) he was on the other side of the heist as a reclusive genius targeted by a wealthy and unscrupulous dealer (Mick Jagger).
Aside from James Gray’s science-fiction drama Ad Astra (also 2019), in which he co-starred with Brad Pitt, Sutherland’s best late work was all for television. In Danny Boyle’s mini-series Trust (2018), which covered the same real-life events as Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World, he played J Paul Getty, the oil tycoon whose grandson is kidnapped; while in The Undoing (2020), he was the father of a psychologist (Nicole Kidman), reluctantly putting up bail when her husband (Hugh Grant) is arrested for murder.
For the latter role Sutherland was in the running for a Golden Globe, having already received an honorary Oscar in 2017.
He is survived by Francine and his children, Kiefer, Rachel, Rossif, Angus and Roeg, and by four grandchildren.
🔔 Donald McNichol Sutherland, actor; born 17 July 1935; died 20 June 2024
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at Just for Books…?
50 notes
·
View notes
Text
Snowy's Fight the Uwu-ification of Wildlife Masterpost
Wikipedia Articles & News Articles:
Timothy Treadwell
Night of the Grizzlies
Travis the Chimpanzee
Roar (film) - Injuries section
Marius Els
Elderly woman gored by bison at Yellowstone
Woman gored by bison at Yellowstone as she walked away
Woman trapped by raccoons after feeding them for 3 decades
Videos
Sea lion pulling child into water
Bison tossing girl in air [Look in suggested videos for a LOT more "Bison helps tourist FAFO" videos, more than I can list here]
Man gored by elk [Photos of incident, non-graphic]
Deer fighting a man (my best guess deer was sick, as doesn't appear to be a male in rut)
Rabid fox attacks woman
Hawks dive-bombing to protect nest (Shows picture of man with bloody head)
Groundhog bites mayor after being held up to his face
Toddyboya's video "Please Stop Touching Wild Animals"
Toddyboya's video "Seriously Please Stop Touching Wild Animals"
KPassionate's video "How to Spot Fake Animal Rescue Videos"
Not Attacks, But Leave Them Alone
Bison calf dies after tourists load it into car
Tourists remove bear cubs from tree, resulting in their separation from mother
Other
Death in Yellowstone: Accidents and Foolhardiness in the First National Park by Lee H. Whittlesey (Book)
Please reblog, and feel free to share any other videos or incidents you know of.
26 notes
·
View notes
Note
most wanted male fcs by you & your members?
Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Alex Aiono, Alex Fitzalan, Alfie Enoch, Andrew Garfield, Anthony Keyvan, Ashton Sanders, Austin Zajur, Blake Ritson, Boyd Holbrook, Brendan Fraiser, Bright Vachirawit, Burn Gorman, Charles Melton, Christian Bale, Colin O'Donoghue, Daniel Henney, Dev Patel, Diego Luna, Dominic Cooper, Drew Starkey, Dylan Arnold, Elliot Fletcher, Evan Mock, Felix Mallard, Henry Golding, Idris Elba, James McAvoy, Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Pope, Jonathan Groff, Josh O'Connor, Justin H. Min, Keanu Reeves, Kedar Williams-Stirling, Keith Powers, Lee Dong Wook, Lucien Laviscount, Mads Mikkelsen, Manny Jacinto, Matthew Lillard, Michael Mando, Mike Faist, Milo Ventimiglia, Ncuti Gatwa, Noah Adams, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Patrick Wilson, Pedro Pascal, Rahul Kohli, Rami Malek, Raymond Ablack, Riz Ahmed, Rudy Pankow, Sasha Roiz, Shemar Moore, Skeet Ulrich, Taron Egerton, Taylor Zakhar-Perez, Timothy Olyphant, Tom Blyth, Tom Holland, & Wentworth Miller!
2 notes
·
View notes
Note
most wanted faces please?
could be male, female or nb!
hello there ! we would love to see any of the following ( but please double check the taken faces page before applying <3 ) wang ziyi, andrew koji, justin h min, matilda de angelis, tom blyth, patrick gibson, timotee chalamet, mena massoud, arnas fedaravicius, charles melton, tom ellis, charles michael davis, michael evans behling, gong jun, philip froissant, jamie blackley, santiago cabrera, sam corlett, oliver stark, aaron fontaine, colin o'donoghue, kit young, toby rego, daniel kaluuya, dev patel, cillian murphy, andrew scott, freddy carter, tommy martinez, robert pattinson, idris elba, deepika padukone, adeline rudolph, samantha logan, hande ercel, namtam tinaparee jasmine tookes, wawaa nicha, celeste cortesi, arsema thomas, charitra chandran, shay mitchell, natalie dormer, ozge yagiz, poppy drayton, olivia cooke, charlotte hope, samara weaving, jessica chastain, marina moschen, jessie mei li ( uses she/they pronouns ), martin sensmeier, elliot fletcher, song kang, jeremy allen white, daniel kaluuya, robert pattinson, jharrel jerome, timothy olyphant, pedro pascal, toby regbo, freddy carter, lorenzo zurzolo, birkan sokullu, riz ahmed, rami malek, serkay tutuncu, peter gadiot, aytac sasmaz, alex fitzalan, andrew scott, wi ha joon, apo nattawin, andrew koji, chay suede, marwan kenzari, cha eun woo, devon terrell, chaske spencer, kiowa gordon and matteo martari, greta onieogou, arsema thomas, deepika padukone, beren saat, beste kökdemir, serkan cayoglu, sidarth malhotra, medalion rahimi, aaron fontaine, celeste cortesi, amita suman, fabian frankel, avan jogia, lee soo hyuk, oscar isaac, charles michael davis, mena moussad, berk cankat, diego boneta, diego luna, sebastian croft, leo woodall, noah centineo, joe locke, kit connor, sofia vegara, penelope cruz, zoe saldana, emma stone, jennifer lawrence, journee smollett, lupita nyong'o
#established rp#active rp#appless rp#oc rp#mumu rp#fantasy rp#period rp#mature rp#tumblr rp#original rp#fandom rp#small rp#relaxed rp#literate rp#lsrp#lsrpg#mw
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
My Week(s) in Reviews: December 17, 2023
I have a Christmas party I have to get ready for, so I'm gonna keep these short.
Godzilla Minus One (Takashi Yamazaki, 2023)
Wow. I really could just leave it at that. I don't think I've seen a Godzilla movie that nails both the human aspect and the monster mayhem quite as deftly as this one. It's an exciting and emotionally rich piece of monster cinema, and very well could be one of the very best films of the year. - 8.5/10
The Holdovers (Alexander Payne, 2023)
Genuinely hilarious and sneakily heartfelt. The tender moments play out so naturally that they pack an emotional wallop, then the brilliant Paul Giamatti or Da'Vine Joy Randolph lets out a perfectly delivered line that'll absolutely floor you. And I just love the look of it, every single piece of this film looks and feels like it's straight out of the '70s. So good. This might be my favorite Payne? - 9/10
May December (Todd Haynes, 2023)
The three stellar central performances drive this weird film about the line between fact and fiction, about the areas of grey in the fact that are stranger than fiction. Portman nails the impossible to read actress, Melton wows with his stunted victim-turned-father-turned-husband, and Moore is sneakily fantastic as the woman who has them both wrapped around her manipulatively disturbed finger. Haynes nails the tone, here. - 8/10
Eileen (William Oldroyd, 2023)
Thomasin McKenzie is wonderful, embodies the titular Eileen wholly, making every movement and decision feel completely organic. She's the reason the beats of the final scenes work despite the underwritten screenplay. Anne Hathaway is absolutely fascinating, here, just magnetic and dangerous and one step ahead of all of us. I wanted more of her, so bad. It's also a great looking film. Oldroyd fills these scenes so effectively, keeping us on our toes along the way. But still, something was missing. I blame that underwritten screenplay. Some authors shouldn't adapt themselves. - 7.5/10
The Equalizer 3 (Antoine Fuqua, 2023)
It's okay. When Denzel kicks as, he kicks ass. But there's not a lot going on, here, and what is here feels incredibly anti-climactic. Everything that happens in this movie kinda just happens. Whatever. - 4/10
Blue Beetle (Angel Manuel Soto, 2023)
I remember exactly 1% of this movie. Well, fine, 1% in addition to whatever percentage George Lopez's character adds up to, because holy shit that was an awful, annoying, unnecessarily over-the-top 'performance'. Yikes. - 2/10
Le Mans (Lee H. Katzin, 1971)
Some egos shouldn't be stroked without question, and McQueen's was clearly a major one. This whole movie was just an attempt to get him to race Le Mans. I thought I'd seen this movie, but I think I only ever actually saw the doc about the making of this movie. The racing footage is great, but everything else is either a total mess or a total bore. Except the music... that's pretty great, too. - 4/10
Enjoy!
-Timothy Patrick Boyer.
#film#movie reviews#godzilla minus one#my week in reviews#the holdovers#may december#movies#film review#eileen#the equalizer 3#blue beetle#le mans#movie#cinema
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Everything that was traded
Spoilers for Dimension 20 Neverafter Episode 18, The Trials of Baba Yaga. BE WARNED THIS IS BIG SPOILERS
Okie doki first this will try to cover the actual facts, what I think was traded and for what, and finally some random wants in this order.
The Facts
-Gerard goes first, in the actual episode Brian Murphy as Gerard says "I would give you my name, my humanity, for hers, for her name." then Brennan Lee Mulligan says "you have asked that Elody's story be hers." In the Adventuring Party for the episode afterward, Brennan revealed what Brian had written "My name/humanity."
-Rosamund next, again in the actual episode Brennan as Baba Yaga says "for you to end this story your own way, then give it to me, princess." Siobhan Thompson as Rosamund said, " I make the choice to be alone, if that's the choice that I get to make that is mine." A bit after Brennan says in his voice "Do you want to give up this hope that you could have this in order that this person would be let go?" to which Rosamund simply responds "-Yes." later in the Adventuring Party it was shown that Siobhan wrote "My true love,❤❤❤"
-Ylfa seems to have no specific moment of a deal but there was a deal just untold, but here are some maybe trade moments. The Baba Yaga says "a rare, rare treasure indeed." after Ylfa hugs her grandma goodbye which Brennan follows up with "- The memory of the little girl leaves.", a bit later he also says "- The memory is something you leave behind", then a bit later Emily asks "I gave away the memory of my grandma, right?" which Brennan answers "- I think you know you gave something, and you feel pain of its absence, but you don't know what it was." also in a tiny bit later Siobhan asks "- Can I give Ylfa some really deep scritches?" which Ylfa replies "- Who's Ylfa?" the Adventuring Party revealing Emily wrote "The Little Girl, so that all that's left is the wolf,' or 'Memory of my grandmother dying, so that I have to experience the loss of her all over again."
-Pinocchio then is asked by the Baba Yaga "what would you give? What would you give for a chance to write this story a different way?" and Lou for Pinocchio responds "would offer up any chance he ever had of being a boy again." A bit later Brennan says "But as the light fades, a single scrap of paper from The Lines Between comes through that portal as it vanishes, floating just in front of you with a name written on it." which Pinocchio then plucks out of the air as Brennan soon after reveals the Step Mother's name "Minerva." Lastly in the Adventuring Party Lou wrote "The chance to be a real boy again."
-Timothy following is asked by the Baba Yaga "powerful book, Mother Goose. What would you give to write in it truly?" and Mother Goose responds "I would offer you a full page." which Baba Yaga responds "That's a deal!" then in a bit she also says "For this precious thing, I think I will be coming to The Lines Between with you." and like all the others in the Adventuring Party it is said Ally wrote "A full page of the true book (the rest will possibly be shredded, disseminated to all other people of the world."
-Pib finally is asked by the Baba Yaga "What would you be willing to give to find the path through this place?" and Zac thinking for Pib says "I think he would think of his story, his book." AND SEEMINGLY SHE ONLY GIVES HIM ADVANTAGE WHAT THE F*?/<NG H\}L CAN ANYONE TELL ME WHAT ELSE HE GETS WHAT!!! also in Adventuring Party Zac wrote on the paper "Pib's book."
Simplifications
Here's is what I think was actually traded and for what
-Gerard traded his name (turning him into his archetype / just a frog prince) for his story to become Elodys
-Rosamund traded her connection with her true love for some freedom I guess not sure but it seems like more than just ADVANTAGE
-Ylfa traded all of her memories of her grandma which explain why so much of herself is gone including her memory of her name since she only got it because it was her grandma
-Pinnochio traded the possibility that he would ever turn into a real boy for the weakening of the Step-Mother/her name
-Timothy traded a whole page of his true book for the Baba Yaga being with them in The Lines Between
-Pib traded his book SEEMINGLY JUST FOR ADVANTAGE, I GUESS GOOD STANDING WITH THE BABA YAGA BUT TRADING ANYTHING IS CREATING GOOD STANDING WHAT THE F*CK AT LEAST MAKE IT AN AUTOMATIC SUCCESS AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!
Anywhoo
Random Wants
I would have liked it if when Gerard's new form was shown instead of saying Prince Gerard of Greenleigh it just said
"A Frog Prince (He/Him) The Frog Prince"
since that would be such a simple change and a thousand times more devastating, how he's just a frog prince, the fact that there is a near infinite version of him that all go by he/him pronouns from the story of The Frog Prince.
A slightly harder creation is art for the rest of the player characters one that is obvious to me is art for Pinocchio where it would be him looking straight forward making the info that he is a puppet, without face muscles, pupils, an actual moving mouth, or a face that can articulate how sad and empty he feels. Mother Goose's art could be also be facing forward holding his book in his arms as his face being lit by the magic in his book as certain characters from the book are because of a lack for a better word holograming. Pib's art could be mixture of the previous arts of him being a clear feral devious cat in much more of a regal stature like him standing straight up showing his fangs with his daggers in his hands but not going to stab something.
Final want the characters being happy goddamm has these episodes been great but depressing as fuck ugh.
#dimension 20#neverafter#dimension 20 neverafter#d20 neverafter#neverafter spoilers#spoilers#fwog#aaaaaaaaaa#this was so depressing#prince gerard of greenleigh#ylfa snorgelsson#d20 ylfa#princess rosamund du prix#rosamund du prix#mother timothy goose#timothy goose#gerard of greenleigh#pinocchio#the frog prince#the prince of destiny#puss in boots#d20 pib#pib#brian murphy#emily axford#brennan lee mulligan#ally beardsley#siobhan thompson#lou wilson#zac oyama
11 notes
·
View notes
Note
mwm
meus favoritos no momento são taz skylar, iñaki godoy e mackenyu arata!! mas, além deles, gostaríamos de ver tom glynn-carney, ewan mitchell, justin h min, tom blyth, patrick gibson, timothee chalamet, mena massoud, arnas fedaravicius, charles melton, tom ellis, jonathan bailey, charles michael davis, michael evans behling, gong jun, philip froissant, jamie blackley, santiago cabrera, sam corlett, oliver stark, aaron fontaine, colin o'donoghue, lee soo-hyuk, timothy olyphant, toby regbo, cillian murphy, andrew scott, freddy carter, diego luna, tommy martinez, robert pattinson, pedro pascal, jacob elordi, fabian frankel, glen powell, ishaan khattar, jack quaid, jacob anderson, johnny berchtold, theo james, jacob anderson, apo nattawin ou lee dong-wook.
1 note
·
View note
Note
mwm fcs?
─── ⋆⋅ Hello nonnie'! There are so many wonderful faces I would LOVE to see. I highly suggest checking out previous answers in our MOST WANTED TAG, to find extensive lists! But here are some other suggestions for you. SUGGESTIONS: Aaron Fontaine, Aaron Fontaine, Amar Chadha Patel, Andrew Koji, Andrew Scott, Aneurin Barnard, Apo Nattawin, Arnas Fedaravicius, Assad Zaman, Bayo Gbadamosi Himesh Patel, Ben Barns, Birkan Sokullu, Chai Hansen, Charles Melton, Charles Michael Davis, Cillian Murphy, Colin O'donoghue, Corey Mylchreest, Daniel Kaluuya, Danny Sapani, Dev Patel, Diego Luna, Ewan Mcgregor, Freddy Carter, Gong Jun, Henry Golding, Idris Elba, Jamie Blackley, Jonathan Bailey, Josh O'Connor, Justin H Min, Kedar Williams-Stirling, Kelvin Harrison Jr, Kit Young, Lee Soo-hyuk, Leo Sutter, Luke Pasqualino, Luke Thompson, Martins Imhangbe, Mckell David, Mena Massoud, Michael Evans Behling, Michhael Evans Behling, Oliver Stark, Oscar Isaac, Patrick Gibson, Pedro Pascal, Philip Froissant, Rahul Kohli, Richard Madden, Riz Ahmed, Robert Pattinson, Sam Corlett, Santiago Cabrera, Timothee Chalamet, Timothy Olyphant, Toby Regbo, Tom Blyth, Tom Ellis, Tom Hiddleston, Tommy Martinez, and Wang Ziyi !
0 notes
Text
Beverly is the perfect happy homemaker, along with her doting husband and two children, but this nuclear family just might explode when her fascination with serial killers collides with her ever-so-proper code of ethics. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Beverly Sutphin: Kathleen Turner Eugene Sutphin: Sam Waterston Misty Sutphin: Ricki Lake Chip Sutphin: Matthew Lillard Detective Pike: Scott Morgan Detective Gracey: Walt MacPherson Scotty: Justin Whalin Birdie: Patricia Dunnock Carl: Lonnie Horsey Dottie Hinkle: Mink Stole Rosemary Ackerman: Mary Jo Catlett Mr. Stubbins: John Badila Betty Sterner: Kathy Fannon Ralph Sterner: Doug Roberts Carl’s Date: Traci Lords Marvin Pickles: Tim Caggiano Howell Hawkins: Jeff Mandon Father Boyce: Colgate Salsbury Mrs. Jenson: Patsy Grady Abrams Herbie Hebden: Richard Pilcher Timothy Nazlerod: Beau James Judge: Stan Brandorff Luann Hodges: Kim Swann Suzanne Somers: Suzanne Somers Gus: Bus Howard Sloppy: Alan J. Wendl Juror #8: Patricia Hearst Jury Forewoman: Nancy Robinette Rookie Cop: Peter Bucossi Policewoman: Loretto McNally Press A: Wilfred E. Williams Court TV Reporter: Joshua L. Shoemaker Court Groupie A: Rosemary Knower Court Groupie B: Susan Lowe Carl’s Brother: John Calvin Doyle Book Buyer: Mary Vivian Pearce Mean Lady: Brigid Berlin Police Officer: Jordan Brown Vendor: Anthony ‘Chip’ Brienza Flea Market Boy: Jeffrey Pratt Gordon Flea Market Girl: Shelbi Clarke Macho Man: Nat Benchley Dealer: Kyf Brewer Baby’s Mother: Teresa R. Pete Church Baby: Zachary S. Pete Doorman: Richard Pelzman Kid A: Chad Bankerd Kid B: Johnny Alonso Kid C: Robert Roser Joe Flowers: Mike Offenheiser Girl: Lee Hunsaker Burglar A: Michael S. Walter Burglar B: Mojo Gentry Mrs. Taplotter: Gwendolyn Briley-Strand Reporter: Jennifer Mendenhall Joan Rivers: Joan Rivers TV Serial Hag: Catherine Anne Hayes Lady C: Susan Duvall Press: Valerie Yarborough Kid: Jordan Young Camel Lips: Jennifer Finch Camel Lips: Suzi Gardner Camel Lips: Demetra Plakas Camel Lips: Donita Sparks Husband A: John A. Schneider Court Clerk: Lyrica Montague Eugene Sutphin’s Nurse (uncredited): Bess Armstrong Birdie’s Father (uncredited): Greg Coale Video Store Customer (uncredited): David L. Marston Stage Diver (uncredited): Kim McGuire Cop (uncredited): John Poague Club Kid (uncredited): Al Sotto Ted Bundy (voice) (uncredited): John Waters Film Crew: Art Direction: David J. Bomba Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Mark Berger Executive Producer: Joseph M. Caracciolo Jr. Thanks: Paul Reubens Original Music Composer: Basil Poledouris Writer: John Waters Production Design: Vincent Peranio Editor: Janice Hampton Producer: Mark Tarlov Supervising Sound Editor: John Nutt Thanks: Don Knotts Editor: Erica Huggins Director of Photography: Robert M. Stevens Associate Producer: Pat Moran Costume Design: Van Smith First Assistant Director: Robert Rooy Property Master: Brook Yeaton Art Department Production Assistant: Jeffrey Pratt Gordon Carpenter: Thomas Turnbull Thanks: Harry H. Novak Set Decoration: Susan Kessel On Set Dresser: Lianne Williamson Sound Editor: Ernie Fosselius Thanks: Arthur Machen Utility Stunts: G. A. Aguilar Sound Mixer: Rick Angelella First Assistant Director: Mary Ellen Woods Sound Editor: Frank E. Eulner Casting: Paula Herold Set Dresser: Michael Sabo Second Unit Director: Steve M. Davison Sound Editor: Robert Shoup Hairstylist: Kathryn Blondell Sound Re-Recording Mixer: David Parker Stunt Double: Cheryl Wheeler Duncan Assistant Makeup Artist: Janice Kinigopoulos Makeup Artist: Debi Young Makeup Artist: E. Thomas Case Post Production Supervisor: John Currin Assistant Property Master: R. Vincent Smith Music Supervisor: Bones Howe Draughtsman: Rob Simons Additional Hairstylist: Howard ‘Hep’ Preston Assistant Makeup Artist: Barbara Lacy Art Department Coordinator: Sarah Stollman Utility Stunts: Michael Runyard Unit Production Manager: Margaret Hilliard Hairstylist: Ardis Cohen Assistant Production Design: John Lindsey McCormick Makeup Artist: Betty Beebe Sound Recordist: Philip Rogers Producer: John Fiedler Secon...
#baltimore#court#dark comedy#evil mother#harassment#hit-and-run#housewife#infamy#motherly love#murder#obscene telephone call#perfection#perfectionist#protection#protective mother#satire#serial killer#suburbia#Top Rated Movies#USA
1 note
·
View note
Text
Hell Hath No Fury (2021) Movie Review
Hell Hath No Fury – ABC Film Challenge – Action – H – Hell Hath No Fury – Movie Review Director: Jesse V Johnson Writer: Katharine Lee McEwan, Romain Serir (Screenplay) Cast Nina Bergman (Doom: Annihilation) Daniel Bernhardt (John Wick) Timothy V Murphy (The Lone Ranger) Louis Mandylor (Rambo: Last Blood) Dominiquie Vandenberg (Inland Empire) Plot: Branded a traitor by her countrymen,…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
"He was never married": The story of John H. Packard, the papermaker [Part 2]
Notes
[1] Massachusetts, U.S., Birth Records, 1840-1915 for John Henry Packard _up through 1910 - 1883, Image 680.
[2] 1900 United States Federal Census for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Hampshire, Plainfield, District 0644, Year: 1900; Census Place: Plainfield, Hampshire, Massachusetts; Roll: 654; Page: 2; Enumeration District: 0644; FHL microfilm: 1240654.
[3] 1930 United States Federal Census for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, District 0012, Year: 1930; Census Place: Dalton, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Page: 21A; Enumeration District: 0012; FHL microfilm: 2340619; U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1935, Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1935, 104; U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1938, Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1938, 129; 1940 United States Federal Census for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, 2-21, Year: 1940; Census Place: Dalton, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Roll: m-t0627-01567; Page: 8B; Enumeration District: 2-21;
U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1942, Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1942, 123; U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1948, Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1948, 51; 1950 United States Federal Census for John P Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, 2-29, Image 23; 1920 United States Federal Census for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, District 0013, Year: 1920; Census Place: Dalton, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Roll: T625_679; Page: 7A; Enumeration District: 13; U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1926,Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1926, p. 398; U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 for John H Packard, Massachusetts, Berkshire, 1929, Berkshire, Massachusetts, City Directory, 1929, p. 287; U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 for John Henry Packard, Massachusetts, Lee City, 3, Draft Card P, Image 7. This document also noted that he has dark brown eyes and black hair.
[4] "Heath: Local and Personal", North Adams Transcript (North Adams, Massachusetts), Aug. 16 1949, 11; Massachusetts, U.S., Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 for John Henry Packard, Heath, Births, Marriages and Death, Image 464; "Obituary of John H. Packard, "son of Cyrus and Dora Mills Packard"" clip within The North Adams Transcript, North Adams, Massachusetts, 30 Oct 1950, Page 15. Also here.
[5] This was, in some way, also confirmed by pages 97, 101, and 104 which list a "Packard, Mrs. Frank" and "Packard, Lena" in the town, but no John H. Packard.
[6] In 1920 he lived on 37 John Street. In 1930, he lived on 261 South Street. In 1935, he lived at 405 High Street. From 1938-1940, he lived 15 Pine Street. From 1942-1950, seemingly, he lived at 16 Chamberlin Ave.
[7] 34-year-old Bertha Greene, 37-year-old Paul E. Borden, 47-year-old Elizebeth Marshall, 18-year-old Mary Marshall, 51-year-old Gilbert Shepard, 45-year-old Katherine Shepard, 23-year-old Edward Shepard, 33-year-old Timothy J. Morrison, 43-year-old Henry W. Mason, 65-year-old John W. Place, 61-year-old Louise Stanton, 25-year-old Miriam I. Stanton, 25-year-old Charles Zink, and 63-year-old Patrick J. Layton. were described as papermakers, while 16-year-old Ethel Goodermote was noted as a plater, 31-year-old Melase Williams as a mill-wright, Rose (age 31) and Olive Orton (age 26) as sorters, 24-year-old Benjamen Porter as laborer. Likely 20-year-old John Marshall who was noted as a machinist who worked at a machinist shop, and 59-year-old Frank B. Stanton as a janitor at an electric plant were also working at the paper mill.
[8] Hayley Glatter, "Massachusetts Has the Second-Largest LGBT Population in the Nation", Boston Magazine, May 25, 2018; Sean Cahill, Sophia Geffen, Anise Vance, Timothy Wang, and Jacob Barrera, "Equality and Equity: Advancing the LGBT Community in Massachusetts", Boston Indicators and The Fenway Institute, May 2018, pages 9-12.
Also see Wikipedia pages "Massachusetts 1913 law" which invalidated marriages of non-residents if marriage was invalid in state they lived and repealed in 2008 (its funny that a referendum was never brought in 2008 because those who repealed it was too cowardly and afraid of being harassed as they should be as reinstating the law is homophobic), and "LGBT rights in Massachusetts" along with
the article "Great Cities for LGBTQ Folks in Massachusetts" (lists Boston, Provincetown, Salem, and Cambridge as cities), "45 Years of Queer: A Massachusetts LGBTQ History" (says "from the start of the LGBTQ rights movement in the 1970s, Massachusetts has been a pioneer in supporting the LGBTQ community"), "Springfield Mass. Pride: Past, Present & Future" in The Rainbow Times, articles in The Rainbow Times about happenings in Western Massachusetts, a LGBTQ Youth organization named OutNow in Springfield, Massachusetts, "Massachusetts Resources - LGBTQ+" on Together We Are Not Alone, Rob Phelps' article "Sites to See: LGBTQ History for New England Day Trippers" in Boston Spirit (lists Beauport, the Sleeper-McCann House, 75 Eastern Point Blvd., Gloucester as a site in Massachusetts), "NonProfits Community Groups Massachusetts" on a LGBTQ directory named Pink Pages, "LGBTQ" webpage of Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism website which is focused on Northampton, "Tracing Queer History in Boston" on the Boston Preservation Alliance website, Ellie White's "LGBT History Month: Whose Histories Are Included?" article on the LGBT Foundation website, "Facts - The reason we are here" from the LGBT Coalition in Western Massachusetts (more about them in next note), and "LGBTQ Towns" discussion on /r/Massachusetts in November 2021 (in comments, people suggest Northampton and Pioneer Valley in Western MA, Lowell, Dartmouth, Amherst, Easthampton, Provincetown, Boston, Hampden County, Attleboro, Salem, Cambridge, and Camberville while saying "Everywhere in Mass is accepting of LGBTQ people").
Additionally, Gay Cities only has listings for four places in Massachusetts: Boston, Worchester, Provincetown, and Northampton.
[9] "Ashley Mark, LGBT Coalition of Western Massachusetts", Daily Hampshire Gazette, Feb. 20, 2014; Brian Steele, "LGBT Chamber expands into western Mass.", Daily Hampshire Gazette, Dec. 7, 2021; Bob Linscott, "Thriving social scene emerging for LGBT older adults in Western Mass.", Boston Spirit, Feb. 28, 2017; "About the Coalition", LGBT Coalition in Western Massachusetts, 2012. It appears that the LGBT Coalition in Western Massachusetts is currently defunct when looking at their LinkedIn page (also here) along with pages on visithampshirecounty.com, Guidestar, ProPublica, and Gay Cities. There is currently a Facebook Group called Western Massachusetts and Northern Connecticut LGBTQ Alliance, which seems semi-active.
[10] The others living in the household were the 16-year-old stepdaughter of Herbert (Ruth E. Pierce), 72-year-old lodger Rhoda Peterson, Harriet's 82-year-old mother (Hannah M. Whitney), and a six-year-old lodger (Dorothy G. Shaw)
[11] 1950 United States Federal Census for James Fitzgibbons, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, 2-24, United States of America, Bureau of the Census; Washington, D.C.; Seventeenth Census of the United States, 1950; Record Group: Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790-2007; Record Group Number: 29; Residence Date: 1950; Home in 1950: Dalton, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Roll: 3485; Sheet Number: 26; Enumeration District: 2-24; U.S., World War II Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947 for James Leland Fitzgibbons, Massachusetts, Ellis-Fucca, Fitgerald, John M.-Fitzpatrick, James H., National Archives at St. Louis; St. Louis, Missouri; Draft Registration Cards for Massachusetts, 10/16/1940-03/31/1947; Record Group: Records of the Selective Service System, 147; Box: 324, Image 1470;
Massachusetts, U.S., Birth Records, 1840-1915 for James Leland Fitzgibbons,_up through 1910, 1902, Image 76 (Page 101); 1930 United States Federal Census for James L Fitzgibbons, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Dalton, District 0013, Year: 1930; Census Place: Dalton, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Page: 18B; Enumeration District: 0013; FHL microfilm: 2340619. Also for context is the 1910 census, the first one he appears in: 1910 United States Federal Census for James L Fitzgibbons, Massachusetts, Berkshire, Otis, District 0064, Year: 1910; Census Place: Otis, Berkshire, Massachusetts; Roll: T624_572; Page: 7A; Enumeration District: 0064; FHL microfilm: 1374585. This may be him in the 1920 census, although it can't be confirmed: 1920 United States Federal Census for James Fitz-Gibbons, Massachusetts, Worcester, Worcester Ward 5, District 0262, Year: 1920; Census Place: Worcester Ward 5, Worcester, Massachusetts; Roll: T625_750; Page: 3B; Enumeration District: 262.
Note: This was originally posted on July 10, 2023 on the main Packed with Packards WordPress blog (it can also be found on the Wayback Machine here). My research is still ongoing, so some conclusions in this piece may change in the future.
© 2023 Burkely Hermann. All rights reserved.
#packards#genealogy#family history#genealogy research#massachusetts#sources#paper mills#paper makers
0 notes
Text
Samuel Lee House
306 4th St.
Coshocton, OH
The Samuel Lee House was located at 306 4th St. in Coshocton, Ohio. Dr. Samuel Lee was for more than sixty years a resident of Coshocton. He was born, and spent his boyhood, on a farm near Pultney, VT. Having studied medicine at Castleton, VT, he came to Ohio in 1809 on invitation of, and along with, Timothy Harris, of Granville, Licking County, who was then minister of the church of Granville, and had gone to visit his friends in the east, and act as a sort of emigration agent. The trip to Ohio was made on horseback. The Doctor was always specially interested in horses, and once remarked that the first thing he ever owned was a horse, and he guessed it would be the last thing he would give up.
After Lee had been in Granville about two years (in which time he married Miss Sabra Case, who was an help-meet indeed, and who preceded him to the grave some three years), he came to Coshocton on the hunt of an estrayed or stolen horse. The town was then a mere hamlet, and wanted a physician, and he removed at once. Practice was then no play. A ride of forty miles in visiting a patient was of common occurrence. The perils and exposures of the new country gave the doctor plenty of work, and his originally vigorous constitution and active habits were heavily taxed, and drafts made upon them bearing heavily upon his later years. For years before his death he was much crippled and very hard of hearing.
Lee died at the house of his son, Dr. S. H. Lee, on the 19th of March, 1874, having completed within four days his eighty-ninth year. His house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 6, 1979. The Parkview North Apartments complex, located at 410 E. Locust Street in Coshocton, Ohio, occupies the site of the Samuel Lee House, which is still listed on the National Register and has not been removed despite its destruction.
0 notes
Note
mwm fcs?
hello there! we would love to see amar chadha patel, oscar isaac, idris elba, tom hiddleston, wang ziyi, andrew koji, justin h min, tom blyth, patrick gibson, timothee chalamet, mena massoud, arnas fedaravicius, charles melton, tom ellis, jonathan bailey, charles michael davis, michael evans behling, gong jun, philip froissant, jamie blackley, santiago cabrera, sam corlett, oliver stark, aaron fontaine, colin o'donoghue, lee soo-hyuk, timothy olyphant, toby regbo, cillian murphy, andrew scott, freddy carter, diego luna, tommy martinez, robert pattinson, pedro pascal join us here at ofcourtfables! <3
#established rp#active rp#acotar rp#appless rp#oc rp#mumu rp#fantasy rp#period rp#mature rp#tumblr rp#original rp#fandom rp#small rp#relaxed rp#literate rp#lsrp#lsrpg#mw#mwm
2 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
Liked on YouTube: How To Get Venom From The World's Deadliest Spider || https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bgNm9l_3qU || Go to our sponsor https://ift.tt/DpUEhvW to get matched with a professional therapist who will listen and help. ▀▀▀ Huge thanks to the Australian Reptile Park for having us over to film – special thanks to Jake Meney for showing us the spiders and Caitlin Vine for organizing the shoot. https://ift.tt/cuizntd Huge thanks to Dr Timothy Jackson with his help and answering our questions. Thanks to Seqirus Australia for providing B-roll footage of the antivenom production process. ▀▀▀ References: Pineda, S. S., Sollod, B. L., Wilson, D., Darling, A., Sunagar, K., Undheim, E. A., ... & King, G. F. (2014). Diversification of a single ancestral gene into a successful toxin superfamily in highly venomous Australian funnel-web spiders. BMC genomics, 15(1), 1-16 - https://ift.tt/pl8CtOh Isbister, G. K., Gray, M. R., Balit, C. R., Raven, R. J., Stokes, B. J., Porges, K., ... & Fisher, M. M. (2005). Funnel-web spider bite: a systematic review of recorded clinical cases. Medical journal of Australia, 182(8), 407-411 - https://ift.tt/bXzIRcJ Herzig, V., Sunagar, K., Wilson, D. T., Pineda, S. S., Israel, M. R., Dutertre, S., ... & Fry, B. G. (2020). Australian funnel-web spiders evolved human-lethal δ-hexatoxins for defense against vertebrate predators. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117(40), 24920-24928 - https://ift.tt/NmGAZbK Nicholson, G. M., & Graudins, A. (2002). Spiders of medical importance in the Asia–Pacific: Atracotoxin, latrotoxin and related spider neurotoxins. Clinical and experimental pharmacology and physiology, 29(9), 785-794 - https://ift.tt/20EMeLU Fletcher, J. I., Chapman, B. E., Mackay, J. P., Howden, M. E., & King, G. F. (1997). The structure of versutoxin (δ-atracotoxin-Hv1) provides insights into the binding of site 3 neurotoxins to the voltage-gated sodium channel. Structure, 5(11), 1525-1535 - https://ift.tt/WfTOc8L Australian Reptile Park. (2022). Snake and Spider First Aid - https://ift.tt/vVLl7zC The Australian Museum. (20 ). Spider facts - https://ift.tt/pCMIsfv ▀▀▀ Special thanks to our Patreon supporters: Orlando Bassotto, Tj Steyn, meg noah, Bernard McGee, KeyWestr, Amadeo Bee, TTST, Balkrishna Heroor, John H. Austin, Jr., john kiehl, Anton Ragin, Benedikt Heinen, Diffbot, Gnare, Dave Kircher, Burt Humburg, Blake Byers, Evgeny Skvortsov, Meekay, Bill Linder, Paul Peijzel, Josh Hibschman, Mac Malkawi, Juan Benet, Ubiquity Ventures, Richard Sundvall, Lee Redden, Stephen Wilcox, Marinus Kuivenhoven, Michael Krugman, and Sam Lutfi ▀▀▀ Written by Katie Barnshaw & Derek Muller Edited by Trenton Oliver Filmed by Petr Lebedev, Derek Muller and Jason Tran Animation by Ivy Tello, Jakub Misiek and Fabio Albertelli Neuron animation by Reciprocal Space – https://ift.tt/HkPxWXr Additional video/photos supplied from Getty Images, Pond5 B-roll supplied by Seqirus Australia Music from Epidemic Sound Produced by Derek Muller, Petr Lebedev, Emily Zhang & Katie Barnshaw
0 notes
Text
DUE TO MEMBER REQUEST, THE FOLLOWING FCS ARE NOW OPEN:
brandon thwaites (viktor morozov)
charlie gillespe (lucas ‘luke’ augustus dupont)
justin h. min (sebastian yoon)
froy gutierrez (aaron cardeno)
ju jingyi (clarisse wang)
seo kang joon (park sora)
danny griffin (james theodore fairchild)
timothy olyphant (edward h. fischer)
jo yuri (baek naeun)
myoui mina (saiko namiki)
keiron moore (jonathan blackthorn)
moon gayoung (isabelle gatsby)
valentina herszage (mina adeline blanchet)
theo james (deisel quinn)
ross butler (ewan lee)
alex fitzalan (adam daven)
meghann fahy (joanna 'jo' keller)
bae suzy (joon park)
abigail cowen (katherine fischer)
maggie spiegel (maude apatow)
PLEASE UNFOLLOW:
@techniicollor
@sknnyylovee
PLEASE CONTINUE FOLLOWING:
@infiinitys
0 notes