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Music | July 12th, 2010
Most of us music teachers aim to offer the best services to our students and let them learn their chosen instruments in the most efficient manner. Having a good teaching strategy will not only give your students fun learning experience but it will also earn you respect in the field. Thus, I have listed some [...]
Tags: determination, discussion, doers, energize, fun learning, Learn, learning experience, lesson plan, mental exercises, music teachers, positive attitudes, slow learners, target, Teaching, teaching tips, treat, understanding, work
Posted in
Movie | March 29th, 2010
To break into the acting world may be your biggest dream and your most daunting task. It takes lots of hard work, long hours, minimal pay, and pure luck. In order to succeed in making it onto the big screen you must possess the passion it takes to get there. One of the most important [...]
Tags: additional training, Angela Rose, area, daunting task, day, Don, dream, geographical area, line, many faces, positive attitude, professional portfolio, raw talent, talent, talent agencies, town, training, voice mail, way, work
Posted in
Movie | February 26th, 2010
Simon Schama’s, Power of Art is a three disc set that explores eight key figures of Western Art. The series is by far the best produced, most insightful, and well told of any art series I have yet to see. Schama is a passionate story-teller, capturing our attention at the beginning of each segment with [...]
Tags: Art, art connoisseurs, artist, disc, gian lorenzo bernini, history, Jacques-Louis David, Jared Steinberg, Joseph Mallord, joseph mallord william, joseph mallord william turner, Lorenzo Bernini, Mark Rothko, michelangelo merisi da caravaggio, Pablo Picasso, Power, rembrandt van rijn, series, Simon Schama, van, viewer, Vincent, vincent van gogh, Western Art, William Turner, work
Posted in
Movie | January 6th, 2010
To break into the acting world may be your biggest dream and your most daunting task. It takes lots of hard work, long hours, minimal pay, and pure luck. In order to succeed in making it onto the big screen you must possess the passion it takes to get there. One of the most important [...]
Tags: additional training, Angela Rose, area, daunting task, day, Don, dream, geographical area, line, many faces, positive attitude, professional portfolio, raw talent, talent, talent agencies, town, training, voice mail, way, work
Posted in
Theatre | September 12th, 2009
Although music has been a part of theater since ancient times, the musical theater we know and love today was born in the United States. America can lay claim to being the nursery of a unique form that used song and dance as a means of furthering the action of the text or revealing information [...]
Tags: America, american patriot, american songbook, audience, ballet troupe, Black, Britain, character, Crook, Dat Man, Edna Ferber, french ballet, George Gershwin, George M. Cohan, George S. Kaufman, Hammerstein, happy accident, Harry, Jerome Kern, John Houseman, Johnny Jones, Josephine Baker, Lynn Riggs, Man River, Marc Blitzstein, Music, musical revue, Oklahoma, Oscar Hammerstein II, Paul Robeson, profitable success, Richard Rodgers, Rock, Rodgers, show, South Pacific, text, theater, United States, work
Satyagraha – M. K. Gandhi in South Africa An opera in three acts by Philip Glass performed by the English National Opera (ENO) at the London Coliseum, Summer 2007. Adapted from the text of the Bagavada Gita by Constance De Jong. Book by Philip Glass and Constance De Jong. After last season’s spectacular performance of [...]
Tags: Alan Oke, central tenet, China, Constance De Jong, Elena Xanthoudakis, english national opera, ENO, gandhi in south africa, Gita, intensity, James Gower, Jean, Johannes Debus, John Adams, kuru field of justice, lack, London, london coliseum, M. K. Gandhi, Miss Schlesen, Mrs Alexander, mystical intensity, Nixon, nixon in china, opera, orchestra, performance, Philip Glass, Satyagraha, scene, South Africa, work
Posted in
Theatre | April 13th, 2009
Good old Will has been out of copyright for a very long time, which means that anyone can take a pair of scissors to his stage work and reissue it with impunity. It’s been going on since the Restoration. The motives of editors and rehashers are many and varied. Yet overall, Shakespeare is revered. Bardolatry, [...]
Tags: anyone, Art, audience, Bernard Shaw, Beverley Davies, Britain, Charles, copyright, example, fellow actors, Henry Chettle, king lear, Mary, Milton, Otello, pair, pair of scissors, Richard III, rival companies, shakespeare plays, stage, Thomas Bowdler, time, Tom Watson, West Side, which means that anyone, William Shakespeare, work, world