You know I just can't think of my favorite fairy tales. I recall one book I had that had many stories in it and one story was about 5 Chinese brothers. I loved the story, but remember little about it.
The story of Bambi was always a favorite also...movie and book.
Does THE COLOR KITTENS count? LOL!
I was surfing through the channels this weekend and I came to one of those
Access Entertainment or Hollywood Extra shows that seem to be everywhere these days. They were interviewing Brad Pitt as part of his press junket for TROY. I could not believe the questions they were asking him. Boxers or briefs? Pajamas or birthday suit? What kind of stupid questions are these to be asking an artist? Granted Mr. Pitt will never be confused with Dustin Hoffman, or Jeremy Irons, or even Nick Cage, but could we not try and pretend that people go to his movies because of what he brings to the screen as an actor, rather than because some people look at him like some kind of beefcake? I know these kinds of interviews go on all the time, and I am sure that I am not telling anyone anything new about the state of our society, but I honestly just sat there stunned that this crap was being shown on national television. <END OF RANT>
JMK - any clues about the eBay item?
Growing up, what were your favorite fairy tales – book, and also film and TV versions? Which ones made you laugh, which scared you, which moved you?
Fifteen USERS - that's what I call ballin' the jack.
DR Jose: We're one day ahead here on Y&R. I am so confused about that Cameron storyline. Some are saying he has a twin brother (not sure which one is dead).
I have vague recollections of, I think, the Sandy Duncan PETER PAN playing on tv when I was a very small child. Also, a live action version of CINDERELLA starring???...I can't remember now. It was from the 1960s, I believe, but still played on national television as a special in the late 60s or very, very early 70s.
He could have seen the Mary Martin version. It was off the air for a good number of years, but NBC aired it a couple of times in the late 60s, early 70s before losing the rights to it. And once the rights were regained and they aired it one final time before the videotape was released (and later a laserdisc and DVD), I had a VCR then and recorded it myself. The Mia Farrow/Danny Kaye version did not use the Broadway score.
Dan-in-To - Have you seen THE DRAWER BOY? Wonderful Canadian play. Saw it here on the weekend. Was surprised to learn that this very Canadian play is the most performed play in regional US theaters.
I suggest that you rename the planet Davanna - and I am available as choreographer of the planet.
I suggest that you rename the planet Davanna - and I am available as choreographer of the planet.
So, I handed a recorder (simple wood flute) to the cast member who can do anything, and she said she'd need a fingering chart or some such thing. Any of the orchestra-savvy DRs know what she's talking about and where such a thing can be found?
So nothing for me to watch on TV now but old Perry Mason re-runs...that is until THE AMAZING RACE and BIG BROTHER begin this summer!
Jennifer, have you tried going into Edit Settings in your Spam/Bulk folder in your Yahoo Mail? If you haven't, there is a choice you can make that might help. I think you have three different questions, how long to keep bulk/spam messages in the folder (1 month, 2 weeks or 1 week). The second question is the one you want. It's what to do if you click a piece of mail as Not Spam. Click "move to my inbox" and perhaps that will train the mail program to put it in your mailbox and not the spam folder. Hope this helps.
In third grade, I was the best Tonette player in my class. In my Elementary Music Methods class in college, I was the worst. :D
Jed, considering the size of Ellensburg, you were probably the only Tonette player in your third grade class.
Jed, considering the size of Ellensburg, you were probably the only Tonette player in your third grade class.No no no, the entire class learned to play the things for some school event or another.
I don't remember the color of the Tonette I played at the All American Day Camp in 1949, but the one I bought recently (to recapture my youth?) is black.We had both black ones and red ones.
User browsing this board: Jed, Ann, George, TCBAll we're missing is PennyO from a full-fledged Washingtonian HHW party!
If I apply the liberal definition being used here to faery tale, then my fav is definitely THE PRINCESS BRIDE, S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure, the 'good parts' version, Abridged by William Goldman.
So I'm not watching AI but I did pass through the room where The Lovely Wife was watching to catch Diana do yet again something she has done consistently through the competition. Exhorting the audience: "All right, everybody up on your feet." No, darling, if you can't bring 'em to their feet with your performance, don't go begging them to stand up before you ever start singing.