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3 T's shape image of Big D: tragedy, triumph, TV

Post n°19 pubblicato il 05 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
Tag: drago

DALLAS – The symbols are simple yet haunting: a pair of X's painted in the middle of Elm Street, marking each spot where a bullet struck the handsome young president, bringing a crashing halt to Camelot and leaving many to wonder if Big D would forever be stained.

Then along came "America's Team," led by the father-figure coach in a fedora and the clean-cut quarterback who served in the Navy, teaming up to win a pair of championships and give Dallas a reason to feel proud about itself again.

That lasted for a while, until the scheming oil tycoons and big-haired women of "Dallas" hit the airwaves, leaving us to ponder such probing questions as, "Who shot J.R.?"

These are the images of Dallas, the Super Bowl city that has been shaped for the rest of the nation — and the world — largely by the three T's: tragedy, triumph and television.

___

DEATH OF A PRESIDENT:

On Nov. 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy visited Dallas to do some fundraising for his expected re-election campaign and to shore up a rift in the Democratic Party caused largely by his push on policies such as civil rights in the still-segregated South.

Thousands jammed the downtown streets to get a glimpse of the dashing Kennedy and the elegant first lady, Jacqueline. At Kennedy's request, a protective bubble was taken off the limousine so those along the well-publicized motorcade route could get a better look at their leader.

Bill Lively was among them.

"I knew it was important to go see any president of the United States," said Lively, who heads the local Super Bowl committee and was a student at Southern Methodist that fateful day. "As a young man, I did not know all that he stood for. But I knew he was a young, dynamic, charismatic president. I was intrigued by him."

Lively had already headed back to school when the car rolled slowly into Dealey Plaza and made a left turn onto Elm Street. Up above, Lee Harvey Oswald lurked on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository, perched at a window that gave him a clean shot at the motorcade. Authorities say he got off three rounds, two of them striking the president. The second killed him, his body slumping over against his frantic wife.

The news reached Lively back on his college campus. As a member of school band, he was summoned to play taps at a local elementary school. That evening, he drove home — right through Dealey Plaza.

"There was no yellow tape, no crime scene. It was a different time," Lively recalled. "It's a day I won't ever forget."

The sixth and seventh floors of the old school book building are now a museum, chronicling Kennedy's presidency, his assassination, his legacy and the still-debated issue of whether Oswald was the lone gunman or even if was involved in the assassination at all.

On most any day, so-called "conspiracy theorists" can be found in Dealey Plaza, doling out literature that insists Kennedy was killed by a Communist plot or as part of a coup within his own government. But perhaps the most striking part of the museum is the glassed-off spot where the rifle was apparently fired, which reveals just how close Oswald would have been to the president's open car moving slowly below.

For the people of Dallas, the most pressing issue was how to deal with being known as the city where JFK was killed.

"That was our label for a number of years," Lively said. "When I would travel around this country and around the world ... people would say, 'Oh, you're from Dallas' in a condescending way. People thought Dallas was a bad city with mean people."

Football, such a dominant force in Texas, helped to change all that.

___

THE STARS OF TEXAS:

The NFL placed an expansion team in Dallas in 1960, a ragtag squad known as the Cowboys that didn't have a winning season until 1966. From there, coach Tom Landry built a championship contender, missing out on a chance to play in the first two Super Bowls with close losses to the Green Bay Packers.

By the 1970s, it was the Cowboys who were known as "America's Team," a catchy label that stuck in a decade that included five trips to the Super Bowl and a pair of championships.

They wore a simple but powerful star on their helmets, played in a futuristic stadium with a hole in the roof (supposedly left that way so "God can watch his favorite team") and had a group of scantily clad cheerleaders who became nearly as famous as the players.

All of it helped Dallas shed its label as a city of hate.

"Every year in the '70s, we had a shot at it," said Roger Staubach, who took over as the team's quarterback after serving in the Navy. "We should've won more Super Bowls, but we were always in the hunt. And I think coach Landry, just his image, who he was. People really respected him around the country. He was a really great man."

Looking back, Staubach knows how much the Cowboys helped shape a new image for Dallas instead of the one that drew scorn from the rest of the world.

"I had felt that way, too, before I got here," Staubach said. "I didn't particularly like Dallas. But the Cowboys had a good, positive part in getting the city away from the assassination."

Staubach stayed after his playing career ended and is now one of the city's most revered residents.

But the most famous resident of all might be one that didn't actually exist.

___

THE EWINGS TAKE DALLAS:

In 1978, CBS gave the green light to a primetime soap opera that would focus on the devious twists and turns of a wealthy Texas oil family.

They were the Ewings and "Dallas" was their town.

For America, the show epitomized a city and state where everything — houses, cars, clothes, hair, trouble — had to be bigger and better than anywhere else. And no one captured the imagination like one of the Ewing sons, J.R.

Portrayed by Larry Hagman, he was such a manipulative, intriguing character that when season two ended with him being shot in his office after seemingly angering the entire state of Texas, the whole country seemed to chime in on who might have pulled the trigger.

"People used to think we all lived like that," said Sally Peavy, a native Texan who works as tourism sales manager at Southfork Ranch in suburban Dallas. "Of course we didn't, but we would tell everyone, 'Yeah, we all have a ranch and we all drive big cars."

The opening sequence included a flyover of Southfork, and the outside scenes were filmed there each summer through most of the series' 13-year run. Originally known as Duncan Acres when the home was built in 1970, it wound up being transformed into a tourist attraction and conference center that draws more than 300,000 people a year.

You can see everything from the gun that shot J.R. to Lucy Ewing's wedding dress.

Lively, the head of the Super Bowl committee, speaks for the locals who never appreciated their depiction on "Dallas."

"It was not representative of the people of Dallas," he said. "That theme song still haunts me. I can't get it out of my head, and I've sure tried over the years."

Peavy, speaking in a Texas twang punctuated by words like "honey" and "baby," sees things differently.

"Oh my gosh, look at the clothes, the shopping they did at Neiman Marcus," she said. "Look at what they were driving. And I used to love that big hair and shoulder pads. That was all part of the era.

"I think it kind of brought a positive light to Dallas after the Kennedy assassination," she added. "At least that's the way I look at it."

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Belmont routs Fla. Gulf Coast 89-56

Post n°18 pubblicato il 05 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Scott Saunders had 16 points and Belmont tied a school record with 18 steals in an 89-56 rout of Florida Gulf Coast on Friday night, sweeping the season series.

The Bruins (19-4, 11-1 Atlantic Sun Conference) used an 18-0 run to break an 8-8 tie.

After the Eagles closed to 42-32 at halftime, Belmont opened the second half with a 24-4 run.

Florida Gulf Coast (5-14, 2-8) could get no closer than 24 after that.

The Bruins forced 29 turnovers, a Curb Event Center record, and shot 47.6 percent from the field (30 of 63), hitting 11 of 30 3-pointers.

Belmont, which won the first meeting 83-51 on Jan. 3, avoided losing two games in a row after its 73-64 loss to Lipscomb on Tuesday snapped a nine-game winning streak.

Ian Clark added 15 points for the Bruins.

Christophe Varidel scored 15 to pace the Eagles, who shot 37 percent from the floor (17 of 46).

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airberlin Spreads Oompah Joy to Celebrate New Gatwick Routes

Post n°17 pubblicato il 04 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

To mark the first airberlin Gatwick flights on 7 February, a traditional German band - "The Bavarian Strollers" - will be playing personalised requests, sent in via Twitter, with dedications being filmed and uploaded onto YouTube.

(PRWeb UK) February 3, 2011

From 7 February, airberlin () - Europe’s sixth largest airline - comes to Gatwick to operate twice daily services to Nuremberg and Hanover. To celebrate, Gatwick () is spreading a little Oompah joy.

To mark the first airberlin Gatwick flights on 7 February, a traditional German band - "The Bavarian Strollers" - will be playing personalised requests, sent in via Twitter, with dedications being filmed and uploaded onto YouTube.

Anyone requesting a song will also be entered into a draw to win four pairs of tickets, courtesy of airberlin (), to medieval Nuremberg () - Bavaria's second city after Munich – or Hanover.

Anyone wanting a personalised song and a chance to win free flights needs to do the following:

1. From Noon on Thursday 3 February to Noon on Monday 7 February, song requests should be sent via a Twitter message to the Gatwick Twitter account (@gatwick_airport.The message should include the song number from the 16 below and (optional) the person it is dedicated to.    

2. Gatwick will then choose up to 20 'requests' at random to be played on 7 Feb by the Bavarian Strollers at both Victoria Station and at Gatwick Airport's North Terminal

3. Each filmed request will be uploaded as a personalised video onto the Gatwick YouTube channel () complete with the dedication message

4. Four people who have put in a song request will be selected at random to win return airberlin flights from Gatwick Airport to Nuremberg or Hanover.

5. In addition, the Bavarian Strollers will play a number of the requests live via the Gatwick Ustream channel () from 1015-1045 at Gatwick North Terminal

List of songs1.        I will survive (Gloria Gaynor) 2.        Wake me up before you go-go (Wham) 3.        Baby one more time(Britney Spears) 4.        Bohemian Rhapsody(Queen) 5.        Holiday(Madonna) 6.        I get around(Beach Boys) 7.        Leaving on a Jet Plane(Peter, Paul and Mary) 8.        Ticket to Ride (The Beatles) 9.        Thank you for the music(ABBA ) 10.    Journey(Don't stop believing) 11.    Satisfaction (The Rolling Stones) 12.    Singin' in the rain(Frank Sinatra) 13.    Pokerface - (Lady GA GA ) 14.    Come fly with me (Michael Buble) 15.    Take my breath away (Berlin) 16.     I feel good (James Brown)

Winners will be notified no more than seven days after the event on the 7th February.

For anyone wanting to see all the celebrations in person, the Bavarian Strollers will be at Victoria Station from 0800-0845 and Gatwick North Terminal 1015-12:00 on Monday 7 February.

For further information, Dirk Singer, +44(0)208 123 9541, gatwick(at)therabbitagency(dot)comFor a full list of terms and conditions go to

###

Dirk Singer00442081239541Email Information

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Theoni V. Aldredge, Costume Designer of 'Annie, La Cage, A Chorus Line', Dead at 78

Post n°16 pubblicato il 23 Gennaio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
Tag: io

Theoni V. Aldredge, the three-time Tony Award-winning costume designer, died Jan. 21 in a Stamford, CT, hospital after an illness, her husband actor Tom Aldredge announced.

Ms. Aldredge worked on everything from Shakespeare to Sondheim, but was best known for her designs for musicals. She won Tony Awards for her costumes for the original Broadway productions of Annie, Barnum and La Cage aux Folles. She was Tony-nominated a total of 15 times, and created iconic costumes for such shows as A Chorus Line, Dreamgirls and 42nd Street. She was called on to recreate her simple, yet memorable work for A Chorus Line when the musical was revived in 2006. It was her final Broadway credit.

She was born Theoni Athanasiou Vachlioti on Aug. 22, 1932, in Salonika, Greece, and, despite spending the majority of her life in the U.S., never quite lost her accent. He mother died when she was five; her father was active in Greek politics and encouraged her to travel. She was educated at the American School in Athens and then went to the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, to which she won a scholarship to study design. There she met actress Geraldine Page, who told her to look her up when she came to New York.

Ms. Aldredge did, and Page remembered her. The designer's first of more than 100 Broadway jobs was creating the costumes for Page in 1959 premiere of Tennessee Williams' Sweet Bird of Youth. In the next few years, she worked on a long-running comedy, Mary, Mary, the Gore Vidal drama The Best Man and the musical I Can Get It For You Wholesale, which introduced theatregoers to Barbra Streisand. She garbed the actors in the original productions of Any Wednesday, Anyone Can Whistle, Luv, Cactus Flower, A Delicate Balance, Annie, Woman of the Year, The Secret Garden and Barnum.

She frequently worked for producer Joe Papp, where she was the principal designer for more than 20 years. ''Papp made me learn my craft, whether I liked it or not,'' she told the New York Times in 2001. ''He paid me $80 a week. I'd say, 'Joe, that's not enough for my cigarettes.' He'd say, 'You have to stop smoking.' ''

She designed costumes for the landmark premieres of Sticks and Bones, That Championship Season, the musical Two Gentleman of Verona, Short Eyes, and, most famously, A Chorus Line, which began at the New York Shakespeare Festival before transferring to Broadway for a long run. That show also resulted in a long collaboration with director-choreographer Michael Bennett, whose Ballroom and Dreamgirls she worked on. Her showy creations for the Dreamgirls cast were among her most remarkable. Critic Stanley Kauffmann called them "tropical foliage gone artfully insane."

Ms. Aldredge was known for the large budgets her opulent costumes often required, and in recent years she bemoaned the limitations that shrinking funds and rehearsal schedules placed on her art.

According to fellow costume designer, Martin Pakledinaz, she did not possess a big ego and was press shy. "People didn't always realize the scope of her work on Broadway plays and musicals, which I think changed design on Broadway," said Pakledinaz. "Then, she also had an amazing ability to design for movies as diverse at 'Network,' 'The Great Gatsby' and 'Ghostbusters.' But I must admit what she taught me most was respect for actors. She loved actors."

She won Drama Desk Awards for Outstanding Costume Design for a 1970 production of Peer Gynt, a 1973 Much Ado About Nothing for the NYSF, Annie, 42nd Street, La Cage Aux Folles and Two Gentleman of Verona. She won an Irene Sharaff Lifetime Achievement Award in 2002. Also active in film, she received an Oscar for her work on the 1974 film "The Great Gatsby." Her designs for the movie were adapted for a clothing line sold at Bloomingdale's. Subsequent movie work included "Network," "The Rose," "Annie," "Ghostbusters," "Moonstruck," "Addams Family Values," and "The First Wives Club."

She is survived by her husband. There will be no services. Ms. Aldredge's ashes will be flown to Greece.

Playbill.com looks back at Aldredge's work:

[flipbook]

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No. 9 West Virginia drubs Marshall

Post n°15 pubblicato il 23 Gennaio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
Tag: gatti

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Ayana Dunning scored 16 points and No. 9 West Virginia beat Marshall 78-21 Wednesday night, limiting the Thundering Herd to the fewest points in school history.

Freshman Taylor Palmer added 14 points for the Mountaineers (18-1), who earned their sixth straight win against their cross-state rival and improved to 34-16 overall against Marshall (5-12).

The previous low output for Marshall came in a 46-28 loss to Eastern Kentucky on Feb. 20, 1973. It also marked the worst defeat by Marshall to its northern neighbor. The previous was 81-39 in 1990.

Marshall, which dressed just eight players for the game due to injuries, shot just 11 percent (5 of 45) from the floor.

All 12 players scored for West Virginia, which had a 50-35 rebounding advantage and forced 28 turnovers.

Madina Ali, coming off a career-high 32 points Saturday against Syracuse, sat out nearly the entire second half as her teammates did the work in their final nonconference game. Ali finished with eight points in 11 minutes.

West Virginia's defense made Marshall work for every shot. Early on, the Thundering Herd spent most of their time passing around the perimeter and hit the rim on rare occasions before getting their first basket five minutes into the game.

The Mountaineers jumped ahead 10-0, made five of their first six 3-point tries and cruised into halftime with a 41-11 lead, marking the second straight year that West Virginia held Marshall under 15 points in the first half.

Marshall went more than 14 minutes between baskets spanning both halves. West Virginia poured it on with a 23-2 run in the second half.

West Virginia has won two straight since losing at Marquette last week. The Mountaineers return to Big East play on Sunday at home against South Florida before entering a tough stretch next week at No. 16 Georgetown and No. 13 DePaul.

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