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The Ten Most Awesome Things Leonard Nimoy Ever Did
He sang a song about Bilbo Baggins—and made a video for it. He wrote an autobiography called I Am Not Spock, and then wrote a sequel called I Am Spock. He starred in a Bangles video. He voiced Galvatron in Transformers: The Movie. He had a cameo on The Twilight Zone. He helped fund the renovation of the Thalia theater in New…
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Things Prince Harry and Emma Watson have in common
Being super hot A commitment to public service They’re both ridiculously sexy Super good-looking Both previously dated ludicrously attractive people, then made public statements that the relationships had “ended amicably” They’re fit, and don’t they know it They’ve both dealt with being in the public eye from an early age Super well-dressed Extravagantly wealthy Easy…
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Open Eye Figure Theatre’s “Nothing is Something”: Indescribable—in a good way
After being regaled with a spontaneous chorus of “Happy Birthday” (it was her 60th), Open Eye Figure Theatre artistic producing director Susan Haas introduced Nothing is Something as a production by “our next generation of artists—literally.” The show’s co-creator (and co-star) Noah Sommers Haas is the son of Haas and her husband, Open Eye’s co-founder Michael Sommers. The…
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Science Museum of Minnesota’s “Space”: Celebrating past triumphs, and crossing fingers for new ones
One of the most striking moments of Journey to Space, the Omnifilm that accompanies the Science Museum of Minnesota’s new exhibit Space: An Out-of-Gravity Experience, involves Space Shuttle Endeavour rolling through Los Angeles in 2012, en route to its permanent retirement home at the California Science Center. As the shuttle is towed through a residential neighborhood in…
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Guthrie Theater’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”: A Shakespeare Comedy That’s Actually Funny
Whenever I teach a comedy in my Shakespeare class, I remind my students that the early modern genre “comedy” doesn’t quite mean what it means now. Shakespearean comedies have a light-hearted tone and a happy ending involving the marriage of two or four or six or eight persons who were either trying to pair off…
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Guthrie Theater’s “Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court”: Knights, erudite but light
Playwright Jeffrey Hatcher can hardly open his mouth or lift his pen without dropping a dry witticism or an erudite bon mot. That gift has served him well, but in the play now on stage at the Guthrie Theater, Hatcher coasts on it—settling for an intermittent patter of chuckles rather than building to belly laughs. A…