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Word: acrobatic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...their second week of rehearsal, the chosen Shubert Alley cats are getting down to business: learning to feel feline. Says Steven Gelfer, 33, one of eight acrobat-dancers in the troupe: "We spent hours on our hands and knees-moving about, resting, cleaning ourselves. Now we have to take what we learned from being on all fours and transfer it to two legs. Just when we were getting comfortable on our knees!" Ken Page, 28, who will play the patriarchal Old Deuteronomy, reports that "Trevor has won our trust, and we've opened...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Making the Cats Meow | 9/27/1982 | See Source »

...cadences of Tom Waits' bluesy songs 'performed by Waits and Crystal Gayle), these restless lovers find spirits to incarnate their once-in-a-nighttime, winnertake-all hopes. For Frannie, it is Ray (Raul Julia), a latino crooner. For Hank, it is Leila (Nastassia Kinski), a circus acrobat. Hank's dream girl is far enough above reality to convince him that the atmosphere is too rarefied, and he returns to earth to search again for someone he can live with as well as love - Frannie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Surrendering to the Big Dream | 1/25/1982 | See Source »

Enter the handsome aviator (Peter Coffield) and his passenger, the daredevil Polish acrobat Lina Szczepanowska (Patricia Elliott), Shaw's totally liberated New Woman. The third unexpected guest comes wielding a revolver. Gunner (Anthony Heald) proves to be Tarleton's illegitimate son, bent on revenge. This gives Shaw a chance to play the dialectical game of cat-and-mouse. Inevitably, Hypatia gets the aviator to chase her till she catches him. "Papa, buy the brute for me," she purrs to Tarleton. Papa does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Imp of Paradox | 8/3/1981 | See Source »

...charming lead might have compensated for much, but Peter Ginna is a lobotomized clown, a colorless mime, a plodding acrobat, barely competent without, dead within--a black hole. He is matched by John Cole, whose readings conjure up the printed page, and by Melissa Franklin in a grating, one-note performance. But there is very good work by Madora Thomson, whose fluent, hammy gestures and Bryn Mawr accent are both funny and seductive; by Christopher Randolph, an endearing, intelligent, convincingly lived-in old Pantalone, fresh vet familiar; and by the director, whose seemingly effortless, unctuous gigolo is a model...

Author: By David B. Edelstein, | Title: Predictable Pratfalls | 4/8/1981 | See Source »

...become the eponym for an adaptation by Michael Feingold. Feingold, and the company in rehearsal, have updated the play by translating it to a contemporary landscape. So we get references to the Dalai Lama, Lulu moves on roller skates, Schwartz the painter becomes Carbone the fashion photographer, Rodrigo the acrobat becomes Juan dos Tres the welterweight champ--all of which is fine and good...

Author: By Paul A. Attanasio, | Title: Rarefied Body-Surfing | 1/15/1981 | See Source »

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