“I shouldn’t tell you this, but she advocates dirty books…. Chaucer…Rabelais... BALZAC!” It’s a laugh line any actor would crave, and it advances the plot
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“I shouldn’t tell you this, but she advocates dirty books…. Chaucer…Rabelais... BALZAC!” It’s a laugh line any actor would crave, and it advances the plot
A musical reading with piano accompaniment by California composer Frieda Peycke.
Coming in January, the first book about the combination of music and poetry recitation by American women from around 1850 to 1950: The Elocutionists: Women, Music, and the Spoken Word, by music historian, Marian Wilson Kimber. http://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/76xzh3xp9780252040719.html#.V8mQXb-dZtY.mailto
How to Gesture, by Edward Amherst Ott, with a plate demonstrating expressive hands in a painting of Roman Queen Tullia who had her father assassinated. Ott was an elocutionist, pedagogue and writer, who also toured on the Chautauqua circuit.