Jo sullivan loesser biography of abraham
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We Can Beat It!
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Identified only as Damon in the Playbill, he's played by Raymond Del Barrio as a broad-brimmed boulevardier who swims with the Manhattan local color that he'll immortalize in short stories.
He's everywhere, starting with a blank piece of paper on which he types "Broadway Stories By: Damon Runyon." Then he goes among them to collect his material, milling with the decidedly idiosyncratic hoi polloi for inspiration. He's there on the sidelines for the big crapshoot in the subterranean sewer system. He's there, stowed away on that water taxi to Cuba. He's there counting the heads of sinners who honor their markers by making personal appearances at a Save-A-Soul Mission meeting.
As a way of saying his world and welcome to it, director Des McAnuff and choreographer Sergio Trujillo — the Jersey Boys duo — have re-invented and splashed high, wide and handsome the spectacular opening number known as "Runyonland," run ragged with dazzling wall-size projections and eye-popping neons that fan out from the stage to engulf the audience. Lighting designer Howell Binkley, in particular, has been allowed license to kill. Then, when you factor in the scenery design of Robert Brill and the costume design of Paul Tazewell, it makes quite a sensory pounding. Whoa!
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Deaths in April
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a list of notable deaths in April .
Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
- Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.
April
[edit]1
[edit]- Dixie Allen, 84, American politician, member of the Ohio House of Representatives (–).[1]
- Enrique Álvarez Conde, 67, Spanish academic (King Juan Carlos University), lung cancer.[2]
- Giacomo Battaglia, 54, Italian comedian, complications from a stroke.[3]
- Thomas N. Burnette, 74, American lieutenant general.[4]
- Bill Butchart, 85, Australian Olympic middle-distance runner.[5]
- Sardar Fateh Buzdar, 79–80, Pakistani politician, member of the Provincial Assembly of the Punjab (–, –).[6]
- Caravelli, 88, French conductor and composer (And Satan Calls the Turns).[7]
- Dimitar Dobrev, 87, Bulgarian wrestler, Olympic champion ().[8]
- Michael William Feast, 92, British-born South African astronomer.[9]
- Gustav Hanson, 84, American Olympic biathlete.[10]
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