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princesssarisa · 16 days
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Inspired by @thatscarletflycatcher's list of actors who have appeared in multiple Jane Austen adaptations, I've made a list of actors who have appeared in two or more adaptations of Brontë novels. I've covered all three of the sisters' books and included radio dramas as well as screen and stage adaptations.
*Timothy Dalton played Heathcliff in the 1970 Wuthering Heights film and Rochester in the 1983 Jane Eyre miniseries.
*Toby Stephens played Gilbert Markham in the 1996 Tenant of Wildfell Hall miniseries and Rochester in the 1983 Jane Eyre miniseries.
*Tara Fitzgerald went from playing Toby Stephens' love interest to playing his love interest's childhood abuser – Helen Graham in the 1996 Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Mrs. Reed in the 2006 Jane Eyre.
*John Duttine holds the distinction of having played both Heathcliff and Hindley Earnshaw in different Wuthering Heights adaptations: Hindley in the 1978 miniseries, Heathcliff in the 1995 radio drama.
*Amanda Root played Catherine Earnshaw in the 1995 Wuthering Heights radio drama and (showing her versatility) Miss Temple in the 1996 Jane Eyre film, as well as narrating the 2004 Naxos audiobook of Jane Eyre.
*Emma Fielding is heard in both the 1995 and 2018 radio dramas of Wuthering Heights: as Catherine Linton in 1995 and as Nelly Dean in 2018. She also narrates the 1996 Naxos audiobook of Jane Eyre.
*Geoffrey Whithead played St. John Rivers in the 1973 Jane Eyre miniseries and Mr. Linton in the 1995 Wuthering Heights radio drama.
*Jean Harvey appeared in both the 1973 and 1983 Jane Eyre miniseries: as Mrs. Reed in 1973 and as Mrs. Fairfax in 1983.
*Judy Cornwell played Nelly Dean in the 1970 Wuthering Heights and Mrs. Reed in the 1983 Jane Eyre.
*David Robb played the Count de Hamal in the 1970 Villette miniseries and Edgar Linton in the 1978 Wuthering Heights miniseries.
*Bryan Marshall played Gilbert Markham in the 1968 Tenant of Wildfell Hall miniseries and Dr. John Graham Bretton in the 1970 Villette miniseries.
*Sarah Smart played Catherine Linton in the 1998 Masterpiece Theatre Wuthering Heights, and Carol Bolton, the female Heathcliff character, in the 2002 TV film Sparkhouse, a modernized, gender-flipped retelling of Wuthering Heights.
*Holliday Grainger played Lisa Bolton, the female Hareton/Linton composite character in Sparkhouse, and Diana Rivers in the 2011 Jane Eyre film.
*Sophie Ward played Isabella Linton in the 1992 Wuthering Heights film and Lady Ingram in the 2011 Jane Eyre.
*Morag Hood played Frances Earnshaw in the 1970 Wuthering Heights and Mary Rivers in the 1983 Jane Eyre.
*Jean Anderson played Nelly Dean in the 1963 TV version of Wuthering Heights and Mrs. Maxwell in the 1968 Tenant of Wildfell Hall.
*Barbara Keogh played two unpleasant Brontë maidservants: Zillah in the 1978 Wuthering Heights and Miss Abbot in the 1997 TV film of Jane Eyre.
*Norman Rutherford played the lawyer Mr. Green in the 1978 Wuthering Heights and Sir George Lynn in the 1983 Jane Eyre.
*Anna Bentinck narrated the 2015 Dreamscape Media audiobooks of both Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.
*Janet McTeer played Nelly Dean in the 1992 Wuthering Heights film and reprised the role as co-narrator of the 2006 Naxos audiobook (she reading Nelly's narration, David Timson reading Lockwood's).
*Edward de Souza played Mr. Mason in two different adaptations of Jane Eyre: the 1973 miniseries and the 1996 film.
Adding Brontë family members and friends into the mix:
*Ida Lupino played Isabella Linton in the Lux Radio Theatre's 1939 adaptation of Wuthering Heights based on the 1939 film, and Emily Brontë herself in the 1946 film Devotion.
*Chloe Pirrie played Emily Brontë in the 2016 TV film To Walk Invisible and Catherine Earnshaw in the 2018 Wuthering Heights radio drama.
*Ann Penfold played Polly Home in the 1970 Villette miniseries and Anne Bontë in the 1973 miniseries The Brontës of Haworth.
*Gemma Jones played Mrs. Fairfax in the 1997 Jane Eyre and Elizabeth Branwell in the 2022 film Emily.
*Richard Kay played William Weightman in The Brontës of Haworth and Lockwood in the 1978 Wuthering Heights.
*Megan Parkinson played Catherine Earnshaw in the 2015 Ambassador Theatre stage adaptation of Wuthering Heights and Martha Brown in To Walk Invisible.
*Susan Brodrick played a barmaid in The Brontës of Haworth and Mary Rivers in the 1973 Jane Eyre.
I'm sure there are plenty more, but this list is long enough for now.
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esonetwork · 2 months
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Outland | Episode 423
New Post has been published on https://esonetwork.com/outland/
Outland | Episode 423
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Jim reflects his first viewing of a classic Sci-Fi from 1981 from Director Peter Hyams – “Outland,” starring Sean Connery, Peter Boyle, Frances Sternhagen, James B. Sikking, Kika Markham, Nicholas Barnes, Clarke Peters, and John Ratzenberger. A Federal Marshall assigned to a mining outpost on Jupiter’s third moon, Io, is faced with a drug smuggling operation that is taking the lives of several workers. Find out how he faces up to incredible odds on this episode of MONSTER ATTACK!, The Podcast Dedicated To Old Monster Movies.
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faithnfrivolity · 2 months
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Like most so-called overnight successes, Vincent Anthony Guaraldi—(July 17, 1928 – February 6, 1976) who forever described himself as "a reformed boogie-woogie piano player"—worked hard for his big break.
The man eventually dubbed "Dr. Funk" by his compatriots was born in San Francisco on July 17, 1928; he graduated from Lincoln High School and then San Francisco State College. Guaraldi began performing while in college, haunting sessions at the Black Hawk and Jackson's Nook, sometimes with the Chubby Jackson / Bill Harris band, other times in combos with Sonny Criss and Bill Harris. He played weddings, high school concerts, and countless other small-potatoes gigs.
His first serious booking came at the Black Hawk, when he worked as an intermission pianist ... filling in for the legendary Art Tatum. "It was more than scary", Guaraldi later recalled. "I came close to giving up the instrument, and I wouldn't have been the first after working with Tatum". Guaraldi's first recorded work can be heard on "Vibratharpe", a 1953 release by the Cal Tjader. Guaraldi then avoided studios for the next few years, preferring to further hone his talents in the often unforgiving atmosphere of San Francisco's beatnik club scene. In 1955 he put together his own trio — longtime friend Eddie Duran on guitar, Dean Reilly on bass — and tackled North Beach's bohemian hungry i club. He also returned to studio work that year, making his recorded debut as group leader, although with different personnel: John Markham (drums), Eugene Wright (bass) and Jerry Dodgion (alto sax). What soon came to be recognized as the "Guaraldi sound", however, resulted from several recording sessions with his hungry i buddies. The original Vince Guaraldi Trio, with Duran and Reilly, can be heard on two releases: "The Vince Guaraldi Trio" (1956) and "A Flower is a Lonesome Thing" (1957)
The late 50s were a busy time. Aside from studio sessions with Conte Candoli (two albums), Frank Rosolino (one album), and Cal Tjader (at least ten albums), Guaraldi toured in 1956 with Woody Herman's third "Thundering Herd", replacing Nat Pierce on piano for one season. Not too much later, just after midnight during 1958's first annual Monterey Jazz Festival, some 6,000 rabid but by now quite tired jazz fans came to their feet when The Cal Tjader Quintet blew them away.
Thanks in no small part to the "sound of surprise" from the feisty Guaraldi, whose extended blues riffs literally had the crowd screaming for more, Tjader's quintet received an enthusiastic standing ovation.
National prominence was just around the corner. Inspired by the 1959 French/Portuguese film "Black Orpheus", Guaraldi hit the studio with a new trio — Monte Budwig on bass, Colin Bailey on drums — and recorded his own interpretations of Antonio Carlos Jobim's haunting soundtrack music. The 1962 album was called "Jazz Impression of Black Orpheus", and "Samba de Orpheus" was the first selection released as a single. Combing the album for a suitable B-side number, Guaraldi's producers finally ghettoized a modest original composition titled "Cast Your Fate to the Wind".
Fortunately, some enterprising Sacramento, California DJs turned the single over...
...and the rest is history.
"Cast Your Fate to the Wind" became a Gold Record winner and earned the 1963 Grammy as Best Instrumental Jazz Composition. It was constantly demanded during Guaraldi's club engagements, and suddenly jazz fans couldn't get enough of him. He responded with several albums during 1963 and '64, perhaps the most important of which was "Vince Guaraldi, Bola Sete, and Friends", with Fred Marshall (bass), Jerry Granelli (drums) and Brazilian guitarist Bola Sete. That marked the first of several collaborations with Sete, a musical collaboration whose whole was greater than the sum of its already quite talented parts.
Guaraldi was also a recognized fixture on television, if only in the greater San Francisco region. He and jazz critic Ralph Gleason documented the success of "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" in the three-part "Anatomy of a Hit", produced for San Francisco's KQED; later, shortly after his first album with Sete, Guaraldi did a "Jazz Casual" TV show for the same network
The most prestigious task, however, was yet to come. Even before Duke Ellington played San Francisco's Grace Cathedral, that venerable institution's Reverend Charles Gompertz selected Guaraldi to write a modern jazz setting for the choral Eucharist. The composer labored18 months with his trio and a 68-voice choir, and the result is an impressive blend of Latin influences, waltz tempos, and traditional jazz "supper music". It was performed live on May 21, 1965, and the album became another popular and critical hit. Clearly, if Vince Guaraldi could write music for God, he could pen tunes for Charlie Brown.
The jazz pianist's association with Charles Schulz's creations actually had begun the year before, when Guaraldi was hired to score the first Peanuts television special, adocumentary called "A Boy Named Charlie Brown" (not to be confused with the big-screen feature of the same title). The show brought together four remarkable talents: Schulz, writer/producer/director Lee Mendelson, artist Bill Melendez and Guaraldi.
Guaraldi's smooth trio compositions — piano, bass and drums — perfectly balanced Charlie Brown's kid-sized universe. Sprightly, puckish, and just as swiftly somber and poignant, these gentle jazz riffs established musical trademarks which, to this day, still prompt smiles of recognition.
They reflected the whimsical personality of a man affectionately known as a "pixie", an image Guaraldi did not discourage. He'd wear funny hats, wild mustaches, and display hairstyles from buzzed crewcuts to rock-star shags.
Unfortunately, with an irony that seemed appropriate for a documentary about Charlie Brown, Mendelson never was able to sell the show, which remains unseen to this day by the general public. Fortunately, the unaired program became an expensive calling-card that attracted a sponsor (Coca-Cola) intrigued by the notion of a Peanuts Christmas TV special. Thus, when "A Charlie Brown Christmas" debuted in December 1965, it did more than reunite Schulz, Mendelson, Melendez and Guaraldi, all of whom quickly turned the Peanuts franchise into a television institution. That first special also shot Guaraldi to greater fame, and he became irreplaceably welded to all subsequent Peanuts shows. Many of his earliest Peanuts tunes — "Linus and Lucy", "Red Baron" and "Great Pumpkin Waltz", among others — became signature themes that turned up in later specials.
Guaraldi became so busy that the ensuing decade saw only half a dozen album releases, three of them direct results of his Peanuts work: "A Boy Named Charlie Brown", "A Charlie Brown Christmas" and "Oh, Good Grief!" At some point between his switch from the Fantasy label to Warner Brothers, Guaraldi took the time to produce and direct an album that has become quite obscure: 1968's "Vince Guaraldi with the San Francisco Boys Chorus", released on his own D&D label. This was followed by two Warners releases: "The Eclectic Vince Guaraldi", which marks Guaraldi's recorded vocal debut; and "Alma-Ville", which showcases a Guaraldi guitar solo on one cut. On February 6, 1976, while waiting in a motel room between sets at Menlo Park's Butterfield's nightclub, Guaraldi died of a sudden heart-attack. He was only 47 years old.
A few weeks later, on March 16, "It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown" debuted on television. It was the 15th, and last, Peanuts television special to boast Guaraldi's original music. He had just finished recording his portion of the soundtrack on the very afternoon of the day he died.
Time ... passed.
Those who followed in Guaraldi's Peanuts-themed footsteps — Ed Bogas, Desiree Goyette, Judy Munsen and others — found the shoes impossible to fill. Not one produced a song or theme anywhere near as catchy as the Master, and several of the specials from the late 1970s and '80s consequently lacked a certain zip.
A whopping three decades later, no doubt responding to unceasing pleas from fans who had played Guaraldi's three Peanuts albums to death — and wondered what had become of the themes and background music in all those other television specials — Fantasy released 1998's "Charlie Brown's Holiday Hits". The CD included nine previously unissued tracks, from the theme to "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving" to a vocal rendition of "Oh, Good Grief", performed by Lee Mendelson's son's sixth-grade class.Four years later, in the summer of 2003, Vince Guaraldi's son, David, teamed up with Bluebird Records to release "The Charlie Brown Suite". The centerpiece selection, long spoken of in reverential tones by fans who only knew of it but never had heard it, is the fully orchestrated "Charlie Brown Suite", recorded live on May 18, 1969, during a benefit performance with Amici Della Musica (Richard Williams, conductor) at Mr. D's, a theater/restaurant in San Francisco's North Beach region. This awesome piece of music clocks in at roughly 40 minutes and skillfully weaves half a dozen songs into an integrated whole: "Linus and Lucy", "The Great Pumpkin Waltz", "Peppermint Patty", "Oh, Good Grief", "Rain, Rain, Go Away" and "Red Baron".
Encouraged by the enthusiastic response to this new compilation of his father's previously unreleased recordings, David Guaraldi has big plans for the upcoming years ... and this Web site is the place to get up-to-the-minute information.
"I don't think I'm a great piano player", Vince Guaraldi once said, "but I would like to have people like me, to play pretty tunes and reach the audience. And I hope some of those tunes will become standards. I want to write standards, not just hits". He got his wish.
Windham Hill recording artist George Winston has been playing "Linus and Lucy" for years, during his concert appearances. A promise to record it and other Guaraldi cuts finally bore fruit in the autumn of 1996, with the release of Winston's "Linus & Lucy: TheMusic of Vince Guaraldi".
"Linus and Lucy" also has been interpreted by Wynton Marsalis, Dave Brubeck and David Benoit; the latter has become Guaraldi's ongoing torch-bearer in the most recent Peanuts animated TV specials. GRP Records had a smash hit back in 1990, with their soundtrack to the television special "Happy Anniversary Charlie Brown", which gathered numerous jazz luminaries for their interpretations of classic Guaraldi compositions, along with some new cuts clearly inspired by Dr. Funk's Peanuts themes.
"Christmas Time is Here" has become a seasonal fixture, and pretty much everybody of consequence has covered "Cast Your Fate to the Wind".
Let's fade with the words of Jon Hendricks, poet laureate of jazz, who once wrote:
"Vince is what you call a piano player. That's different from a pianist. A pianist can play anything you can put in front of him. A piano player can play anything before you can put it in front of him."
Source: Derrick Bang, All About Jazz
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redroci · 2 years
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wip day!
tagged by @indorilnerevarine
tagging @amistrio, @chyrstis, @foofygoldfish, @geronimo-11, @jackiesarch, @ravenschampion, @simonxriley, @jackalopestride, @strafethesesinners, @whoever else wants to play
Behold, one scene that will probably end up in only the dead, and one that probably won't.
Trigger warning for implied suicide
"I haven't been able to get a hold of Kovacs. He wasn't doing great last I heard from him; I was on my way up to check in. Was hoping you could come with me." I don't want to have to find his body alone, is what goes unsaid. She goes with him. 
They don't get to Kovacs in time. 
Running, running, running. A maze of dust and rubble and everything is red and she doesn't remember it being this red. Sand in her eyes and in her teeth and blood under her nails and she can't remember why she's running. She wasn't alone, where did they go? Did she leave them? Whose blood is this? 
Markham bleeds out in the street. 
(no he didn't) 
Sully is dead before he hits the ground. 
(that wasn't how it happened) 
Ahmadi gives her an accusatory look. "You killed them," he says, and steps backwards. He is silent as he falls. 
I didn't, he didn't! He's fine… 
"Rook, wake up!"
no tw on this one:
"I don't think I've ever met a US Marshal before," Pratt reflected. "You think they're all like Chuck Norris?"
"He played a Texas Ranger, Pratt," Hudson corrected irritably. She was sorting through the Eden's Gate casefile - again - and the third time through had done nothing to improve her mood.
"Oh, right. Who am I thinking of, then?"
"Tommy Lee Jones, in The Fugitive?" Alex guessed. "Or John Wayne, maybe, he played a Marshal a couple times."
"No, on TV, I'm pretty sure."
"Oh, Just-"
Hudson slammed a folder down so hard it skidded across the table. Pratt caught it before it could fly off and scatter. "I just don't understand why they're only sending one guy. We've been putting this case together for years, we've lost officers to these assholes, and they're gonna send one guy?" Eden's Gate hadn't actually killed anybody yet(that they could prove), certainly not any deputies. But a few had left the department in favor of the cult, which, while alarming, was not actually illegal. "I just don't get what they're thinking." Hudson collapsed into her chair, shoving the stack of files away.
"Optics," Alex said. "They're thinking about how it'll look in the news."
"What do you mean?" Pratt asked, frowning.
"It's like the worst parts of Waco and Ruby Ridge had a horrible baby," she explained. "They only send one fed, when it all goes south the story is about bumbling local idiots and a failed raid. They send in the FBI and the ATF and the National Guard and then it's 'government jack boots trigger massacre in standoff with militant cult.'"
"Or maybe it's not as serious as you all seem to think it is," a man interjected from the doorway. Sheriff Whitehorse was standing behind him, already looking weary. This must be the Marshal, then.
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rosecorcoranwrites · 5 years
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True Life Adventure Reading List
All synopses are taken from either the Flagstaff Public Library catalog, Novelist.com, or my own fevered imagination.
West with the Night by Beryl Markham
Beryl Markham spent most of her life in East Africa as an adventurer, a racehorse trainer, and an aviatrix―she became the first person to fly nonstop from Europe to America and the first woman to fly solo east to west across the Atlantic.
Touching the Void by Joe Simpson
Forced to cut the rope that attached him Joe Simpson, who had fallen off an ice ledge, Simon Yate’s returns to his Andean base camp consumed by guilt. Meanwhile, Simpson, who had miraculously survived, must deal with injuries, starvation and frostbite in an effort to make his own journey back to the camp before Yates leaves.
View from the Summit by Edmund Hillary
The remarkable memoir of Sir Edmund Hillary, who, along with Tenzing Norgay, was one of the first men to reach the summit of Mt. Everest.
Touching My Father's Soul : A Sherpa's Journey to the Top of Everest by Jamling Tenzing Norgay
Told by the son of Tenzing Norgay, Touching My Father's Soul is the first modern account of the Everest experience from the unheard voice of its indigenous people, revealing a fascinating and profound world that few--even many who have made it to the top--have ever seen.
Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer
In April 1992, a young man from a well-to-do family hitchhikes to Alaska and walks alone into the wilderness north of Mt. McKinley. Four months later, his decomposed body is found by a moose hunter. How Chris McCandless came to die is the unforgettable story of Into the Wild.
Soul Surfer: A True Story of Faith, Family, and Fighting to Get Back on the Board by Bethany Hamilton
The teenage surfer who lost her arm in a shark attack in 2003 describes how she has coped with this life-altering event with the help of her faith, the changes in her life, and her return to the sport she loves.
Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia by Michael Korda
Hero profiles T.E. Lawrence—soldier, strategist, scholar, and adventurer—discussing his Oxford education, contradictory nature, and role in uniting the Arab tribes against Turkish adversaries.
Kon-Tiki by Thor Heyerdahl
Six scientists risk their lives on a 4,300 miles journey aboard a raft to test a theory about the origin of the Polynesians
Endurance : Shackleton's Incredible Voyage by Alfred Lansing
The harrowing tale of British explorer Ernest Shackleton's 1914 attempt to reach the South Pole, one of the greatest adventure stories of the modern age.
Black Gun, Silver Star: The Life and Legend of Frontier Marshal Bass Reeves by Arthur Burton
Bass Reeves, who had spent his early life as a slave, became a lawman exceptionally adept at apprehending fugitives and outlaws; his life story reads like a larger-than-life drama of the Wild West.
The Spirit of St. Louis by Charles Lindbergh
Lindbergh takes readers on an extraordinary journey, bringing to life the thrill and peril of his 1927 trans-Atlantic travel in a single-engine plane.
The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon by David Grann
Interweaves the story of British explorer Percy Fawcett, who vanished during a 1925 expedition into the Amazon, with the author's own quest to uncover the mysteries surrounding Fawcett's final journey and the secrets of what lies deep in the Amazon jungle.
A Woman in Arabia: The Writings of the Queen of the Desert by Gertrude Bell
During World War I, Bell worked her way up from spy to army major to become one of the most powerful woman in the British Empire. After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire, she was instrumental in drawing the borders that define the region today, including creating an independent Iraq.
In The Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick
After their ship is sunk by an eighty-ton sperm whale, the twenty-man crew of the Essex attempted to make the 3,000-mile-back to land in three tiny boats, as one by one, they succumbed to hunger, thirst, disease, and fear.
Longitude : The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time by Dava Sobel
Longitude is the of John Harrison's forty-year obsession with building a clock that would keep precise time at sea, as well as a fascinating brief history of astronomy, navigation, and clock making.
Wind, Sand, and Stars by Antoine de Saint- Exupéry
The experiences and philosophy of French airline pilot—and author of The Little Prince—Saint- Exupéry, whose flying career began in 1926 and ended when his plane disappeared in 1944.
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mcshep-everyday · 6 years
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Chapters: 35/35 Fandom: Stargate Atlantis Rating: Mature Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Relationships: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard Characters: John Sheppard, Rodney McKay, Teyla Emmagan, Aiden Ford, Elizabeth Weir, Lyle Holland, Marshall Sumner, Other Characters Mentioned, Original Non-Human Character(s), Stackhouse (Stargate Atlantis), Markham (Stargate Atlantis), Carson Beckett, Original Characters, Bates (Stargate Atlantis), daemons - Character, Acastus Kolya, Chaya Sar, Allina (Stargate Atlantis), Dillon Everett, Steven Caldwell, Radek Zelenka, Patrick Sheppard, Dave Sheppard, John Sheppard's Mother, Hank Landry, Jack O'Neill, Sam Carter Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Daemons, Angst, Canonical Character Death, Telepathic Bond, Identity Issues, Daemons, spirituality, Ancients, life and death, what happens when the Daemon dies before the human?, Slow Build, Slow Burn, Flying, Minor Character Death, Cultural Differences, Sentient Atlantis, Athosians, Loneliness (except not really), Cultural Taboos, (I'm exploring a new writing style), Psychological Torture, incomplete sentences, Ascension, Run-On Sentences, Season/Series 01, Protective John Sheppard, Zero Point Modules, I'm drawing on these canon episodes but scrambling their order and context, Brief mentions of blood/gore, Non-Linear Narrative, Wraith, Survivor Guilt, Souls, Temporary Character Death, this fic is rapidly turning out much more complicated than i'd meant, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, BAMF John Sheppard, Atlantis team loyalty, Protective Atlantis, Marines, Team as Family, First Kiss, Don't Ask Don't Tell, First Time, Angst with a Happy Ending Series: Part 1 of the ghost and the raven Summary:
In a world where everyone has a Daemon, John Sheppard is born without one. (except it is much more complicated than that)
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oselatra · 6 years
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Fall Arts 2018 calendar
Art, music, film and more.
GREATER LITTLE ROCK
MUSIC
SEPT. 20: Laurence Juber. Argenta Acoustic Music Series. The Joint Theater & Coffeehouse, 7:30 p.m., $25.
SEPT. 20: Malcolm Holcombe. White Water Tavern, 8:30 p.m., $10.
SEPT. 20: Charlotte Taylor. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 21: Mulehead. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
SEPT. 21: Go For Gold, Slick Grip, Vera Forever. Vino's, 8 p.m., $8.
SEPT. 21: Kimberly Marshall. A concert from the Central Arkansas Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 8 p.m., free.
SEPT. 21: Flatland Cavalry. Stickyz Rock 'n' Roll Chicken Shack, 9 p.m., $10-$13.
SEPT. 21: Dylan Earl & The Reasons Why, Dazz & Brie. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
SEPT. 21: Mister Lucky. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 21: "The Fabulous Freddie Mercury Tribute." Featuring Randall Shreve. Rev Room, 10 p.m., $15-$20.
SEPT. 22: Claude Bourbon. A Little Rock Folk Club concert. Hibernia Irish Tavern, 7:30 p.m., $8-$15.
SEPT. 22: The Toadies. Rev Room, 8 p.m., $20-$25.
SEPT. 22: Royal Thunder, Headcold, Or. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
SEPT. 22: LLC, I-40 Ramblers. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 22: Henry and the Invisibles. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $8.
SEPT. 26: Jazz in the Park: Rodney Block Collective. History Pavilion, Riverfront Park, 6 p.m., free.
SEPT. 26: Sunflower Bean. Stickyz, 8 p.m., $12-$15.
SEPT. 27: Potluck & Poison Ivy. Featuring Kevin Gordon. 7 p.m., The Joint, $35.
SEPT. 27: Amythyst Kiah. Oxford American Concert Series. South on Main, 8 p.m., $25-$32.
SEPT. 27: Randy Rogers Band. Rev Room, 8:30 p.m., $20-$25.
SEPT. 27: RVS. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 28: "Gershwin: Remembrance and Discovery." A concert from Richard Glazier. 7:30 p.m., CALS Ron Robinson. Free.
SEPT. 28: The Sword. Rev Room, 8:30 p.m., $18-$20.
SEPT. 28: Bluesboy Jag & Mudboy. Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
SEPT. 28: Lydia Lunch Retrovirus, Mouton, Listen Sister. Four Quarter Bar, 9 p.m., $10.
SEPT. 28: William Blackart, Colour Design, Fiscal Spliff. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
SEPT. 28: Mark Edgar Stuart. South on Main, 7 p.m.
SEPT. 28: Unraveled. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 29: As Cities Burn. Vino's, 7 p.m., $15.
SEPT. 29: Dave Hoover, Sean Michael. An Elvis Tribute. Argenta Community Theater, 7 p.m.
SEPT. 29: Earl & Them. Cajun's Wharf, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 29-30: "Sorcerer's Apprentice." Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m. Sat., 3 p.m. Sun., $16-$68.
SEPT. 30: Colt Ford. Clear Channel Metroplex, 6 p.m., $22-$30.
SEPT. 30: The Salty Dogs. White Water Tavern, 6 p.m.
OCT. 2: Mozart & Schumann. Arkansas Symphony Orchestra's River Rhapsodies Chamber Series. Clinton Presidential Center, 7 p.m., $23.
OCT. 3: Squirrel Nut Zippers. Rev Room, 8 p.m., $30-$35.
OCT. 4: September Mourning. Rev Room, 8 p.m., $10-$13.
OCT. 5: Gil Franklin. Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
OCT. 5: Destroyed of Light, Colour Design. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
OCT. 5: Sabine Valley, Wild Yam. Vino's, 8 p.m., $7.
OCT. 5: The Big News. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 6: Kate Campbell. A Little Rock Folk Club concert. Hibernia Irish Tavern. 8:30 p.m., $15.
OCT. 6: Steezy Street, Bedroom Collective. Vino's, 8 p.m., $7.
OCT. 6: Amasa Hines. Rev Room, 9 p.m., $12-$15.
OCT. 6: J.D. Wilkes. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m., $10.
OCT. 6: The Smoking Flowers. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 7: R&B Cook-Off: Rhythm & Blues, Ribs & Butts. With music from Lagniappe. 1 p.m., Argenta Plaza, $15.
OCT. 7: "The Singing Heart." An Arkansas Chamber Singers concert. Calvary Baptist Church, 3 p.m., $10-$18.
OCT. 9: Fall Out Boy. Verizon Arena, 7 p.m., $31-$71.
OCT. 9: Trixie Mattel. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 8 p.m., $41-$166.
OCT. 10: Lauren Daigle. Verizon Arena, 7:30 p.m., $28-$78.
OCT. 11: Thomas Rhett, Brett Young, Midland. Verizon Arena, 7:30 p.m., $33-$78.
OCT. 11: Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires. White Water Tavern, 8:30 p.m.
OCT. 12: Harrisong. Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
OCT. 12: Deadbird, Terminal Nation, Tranquilo. White Water Tavern, 8:30 p.m.
OCT. 12: The Great Whiskey Rendezvous. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 12: Cody Johnson. First Security Amphitheater, 6:30 p.m., $25-$80.
OCT. 13: Trey Johnson & Jason Willmon. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
OCT. 13: The Busty Petites. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 18: "Sounds in the Stacks: Tonya Leeks." CALS Sue Cowan Williams Library, 6:30 p.m., free.
OCT. 18: Brooke Miller. Argenta Acoustic Music Series. The Joint Theater & Coffeehouse, 7:30 p.m., $25.
OCT. 18: The Russ Liquid Test. Rev Room, 9 p.m., $16-$20.
OCT. 18: Robert Finley. Oxford American Concert Series. South on Main, 8 p.m., $28-$36.
OCT. 19: Jerry Redd & The Snowmen. White Water Tavern, 9 p.m.
OCT. 19: Big Red Flag, Jamie Lou & the Hullabaloo. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 20-21: "The Music of Star Wars." Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m. Sat., 3 p.m. Sun., $16-$68.
OCT. 21: John Fullbright. Oxford American Concert Series, South on Main, 7 p.m., $25-$34.
OCT. 22: "Take Me To the River." Dirty Dozen Brass Band, George Porter Jr. and others. UA Pulaski Technical College, Center for the Humanities and Arts, 7:30 p.m., $30-$110.
OCT. 26: Combsy. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
OCT. 27: Negro Terror, Queen Anne's Revenge, Bloodlikewine, Headdrop, Mortalus and more. Four Quarter Bar, 8 p.m., $10.
OCT. 28: MercyMe. Verizon Arena, 6 p.m., $23-$68.
OCT. 28: The Steel Wheels. Oxford American Concert Series. South on Main, 7 p.m., $20-$26.
OCT. 31: "The Rocky Horror Pickin' Show." The Crumbs. Four Quarter Bar, 9 p.m., $7.
NOV. 1: Keith Urban. Verizon Arena, 7:30 p.m., $40-$97.
NOV. 1: Fabian Almazan Trio. Oxford American Concert Series. South on Main, 8 p.m., $30-$34.
NOV. 2: Rodney Carrington. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7 p.m., $44-$179.
NOV. 2: The Josh Parks Band. Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
NOV. 2: Mountain Sprout. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $8.
NOV. 3: Ray LaMontagne. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 8 p.m., $35-$85.
NOV. 3: NF. Verizon Arena, 8 p.m., $25-$45.
NOV. 3: Freeverse. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $7.
NOV. 9: Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons. Verizon Arena, 8 p.m., $60-$125.
NOV. 9: Charlie Hunter Trio. CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 7 p.m., $10.
NOV. 10-11: "Elgar's Enigma." Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m. Sat., 3 p.m. Sun., $16-$68.
NOV. 13: "Sounds in the Stacks: Stuart Baer." CALS Amy Sanders Library, Sherwood, 6:30 p.m., free.
NOV. 13: "Laskarov Plays Brahms." Arkansas Symphony Orchestra's River Rhapsodies Chamber Series. Clinton Presidential Center, 7 p.m., $23.
NOV. 13: Drive-By Truckers. Rev Room, 8 p.m., $25-$30.
NOV. 15: Ian Ethan Case. Argenta Acoustic Music Series. The Joint Theater & Coffeehouse, 7:30 p.m., $25.
NOV. 16: Arkansauce. Rev Room, 8:30 p.m., $8-$10.
NOV. 16: Dazz & Brie, Zigtebra. Four Quarter Bar, 10 p.m., $8.
NOV. 18: Mae. Rev Room, 7:30 p.m., $17-$20.
NOV. 20: "Le Grand Orgue." Organist Rees Roberts. St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 7 p.m.
NOV. 30: Ashley McBryde. Rev Room, 8:30 p.m., $20.
DEC. 1: Five Finger Death Punch, Breaking Benjamin. Verizon Arena, 6 p.m., $25-$80.
DEC. 1: The Here and Now Band. A Little Rock Folk Club concert. Hibernia Irish Tavern, 8:30 p.m., $15.
DEC. 1: Puddles Pity Party. UA Pulaski Technical College, Center for the Humanities and Arts, 7:30 p.m., $25-$40.
DEC. 6: Mandolin Orange. Oxford American Concert Series. South on Main, 8 p.m., $30-$38.
DEC. 7-8: "A Song for the Season." An Arkansas Chamber Singers concert. Old State House Museum, 7 p.m., free.
DEC. 14: Akeem Kemp Band. Markham Street Grill and Pub, 8:30 p.m.
DEC. 14-16: "Home for the Holidays." Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 3 p.m. Sun., $16-$68.
VISUAL ART
THROUGH SEPT. 28: "Memory / Commitment / Aspiration," works from the Pierrette Van Cleve Collection; "Water Memory," installation. UA Little Rock.
THROUGH SEPT. 30: "Mauricio Silerio: Los Demonios de mi Terra." Underwater photography. UA Little Rock.
THROUGH OCT. 7: "Justin Bryant: That Survival Apparatus." Watercolors and prints. Historic Arkansas Museum.
THROUGH OCT. 7: "Robert Baines: Living Treasure and Fabulous Follies." Jewelry. Arkansas Arts Center.
THROUGH OCT. 11: "Peter Pincus: Color and Form," ceramics; "Art Process: Drawings and More." University of Central Arkansas.
THROUGH OCT. 19: "American Perspectives on Modernism." UA Pulaski Tech.
THROUGH OCT. 27: "A Legacy of Brewers: The Paintings of Nicholas, Adrian and Edwin Brewer." Butler Center's Galleries at Library Square.
THROUGH OCT. 28: "Up in Smoke." The accoutrements of smoking. Esse Purse Museum.
THROUGH OCT. 28: "Reveal/Conceal: Exploring Identity in Contemporary Art." Arkansas Arts Center.
THROUGH NOV. 4: "Delta Through the Decades Deux: Selections from the Collection." Arkansas Arts Center.
THROUGH NOV. 4: "Space Between Teeth: Linda Lopez + Marc Mitchell." Historic Arkansas Museum.
THROUGH FALL 2019: "A Piece of My Soul: Quilts by Black Arkansans." Old State House Museum. 324-9597.
SEPT. 20 (OPENS): "RESPECT: Celebrating 50 years of AfriCOBRA." Mosaic Templars Cultural Center. 683-3593.
SEPT. 22: Thea Paves the Way, chalk art event. Clinton Presidential Center.
SEPT. 25: "City Leaders as Urban Designers: Planning for Rapid Change." Architecture and Design Network. Arkansas Arts Center.
SEPT. 28-DEC. 30: "Independent Vision: Modern and Contemporary Art from the Martin Muller Collection." Arkansas Arts Center.
OCT. 10-NOV. 10: "Artist as Catalyst." Silkscreens. UA Little Rock.
OCT. 15-NOV. 16: "Faculty Biennial." UA Little Rock.
OCT. 22-DEC. 2: "Electrify: VSA Emerging Young Artists." UA Little Rock.
COMEDY
THROUGH NOV. 17: "The Lighter Side of the Apocalypse." A comedy from The Main Thing. The Joint, 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $24.
SEPT. 19-22: Michael Mack. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
SEPT. 22: The Comedy Get Down. Featuring Cedric the Entertainer, Eddie Griffin, D.L. Hughley and George Lopez. Verizon Arena, 8 p.m., $49-$75.
SEPT. 25: Punch Line. Weekly open-mic stand-up comedy. The Joint, 8 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 26-29: Greg Morton. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $10-$15.
SEPT. 26: The Joint Venture. Weekly improv comedy. The Joint, 8 p.m., $8.
SEPT. 27: Steve Hofstetter. The Loony Bin, 9:45 a.m., $20.
SEPT. 30: Brad Williams. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m., $22.
OCT. 3-6: Ricky Reyes. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
OCT. 10-13: Quinn Patterson. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
OCT. 16: Brain Trust with Michael Brown. Hibernia Irish Tavern. 8 p.m.
OCT. 17-20: Alex Elkin. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
OCT. 20: The Veterans of Comedy. Arkansas Repertory Theatre, 8 p.m.
OCT. 24-27: J.R. Brow. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
NOV. 7-10: Dave Landau. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
NOV. 14-17: Mr. Showtime. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
NOV. 23-JAN. 12: "A Fertle Holiday." A holiday comedy from The Main Thing. The Joint, 8 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $24.
NOV. 28-DEC. 1: Reno Collier. The Loony Bin, 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Sat., 10 p.m. Fri.-Sat., $8-$12.
NOV. 30: Steve Martin & Martin Short, I'm With Her. Verizon Arena, 8 p.m., $60-$250.
NOV. 30: Kountry Wayne. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 8 p.m., $28-$48.
DEC. 7: Martin Lawrence. Verizon Arena, 7:30 p.m., $40-$120.
DEC. 18: Brain Trust with Michael Brown. Hibernia Irish Tavern. 8 p.m.
DANCE
OCT. 19-21: "Dracula." A Ballet Arkansas production. UA Pulaski Technical College, Center for Humanities and Arts, 7 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sat.-Sun., $15-$35.
DEC. 7-9: "Nutcracker Spectacular." A Ballet Arkansas production. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7 p.m. Fri.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sat.-Sun., $23-$102.
DEC. 9: "Land of the Sweets Nutcracker Tea." A Ballet Arkansas performance and meet-and-greet. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 11:30 a.m., $30.
DEC. 27: Moscow Ballet's "Great Russian Nutcracker." Robinson Center Performance Hall, 3 p.m. and 7 p.m., $31-$178.
FILM
OCT. 7: "The Opera House." A documentary screening from Arkansas Cinema Society and Arkansas District Metropolitan Opera Auditions. CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 2:30 p.m., $25.
OCT. 9: "The Exorcist." (1979). With stuntwoman Ann Miles. CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 6:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 11, 16: "MFKZ." English dubs. Cinemark Colonel Glenn 18, 7 p.m.
OCT. 12: "George Takei's 'Allegiance': The Broadway Musical on the Big Screen." CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 7 p.m., free.
NOV. 16: "The Last Waltz." CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 7 p.m., $5.
THEATER
THROUGH SEPT. 22: "Social Security." Murry's Dinner Playhouse Theater.
THROUGH SEPT. 30: "The Producers." Community Theatre of Little Rock. Elks Lodge, North Little Rock.
SEPT. 25-OCT. 20: "The Foreigner." Murry's Dinner Playhouse Theater.
OCT. 6: "Unemployment." A reading of Werner Trieschmann's play from the Rolling River Playwrights Collective. Arkansas Repertory Theatre, 7 p.m., $10.
OCT. 11-28: "Evil Dead: The Musical." The Studio Theatre.
OCT. 12-13: "Jersey Boys." The touring Broadway production. Robinson Center Performance Hall, $28-$78.
OCT. 12-28: "If/Then." The Weekend Theater.
OCT. 23-NOV. 17: "The Hallelujah Girls." Murry's Dinner Playhouse Theater.
OCT. 28: "Murder in the Cathedral." St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 7 p.m.
NOV. 1-4: "Blackbird." The Studio Theatre.
NOV. 3: "Life Science." A reading of Judy B. Goss' play from the Rolling River Playwrights Collective. Arkansas Repertory Theatre, 7 p.m., $10.
NOV. 20-25: "Love Never Dies." The touring Broadway production. Robinson Center Performance Hall.
NOV. 23-DEC. 31: "Elf." Murry's Dinner Playhouse Theater.
NOV. 29-DEC. 14: "A Christmas Story." The Studio Theatre.
NOV. 30-DEC. 15: "Steel Magnolias." The Weekend Theater.
NOV. 30-DEC. 16: "Jack Frost in Santa Land." Arkansas Arts Center Children's Theatre.
DEC. 1: "Blood Moon." A reading of John Haman's play from the Rolling River Playwrights Collective. Arkansas Repertory Theatre, 7 p.m., $10.
DEC. 7-15: "A Christmas Carol." Argenta Community Theater.
DEC. 22-23: "Finding Neverland." The touring Broadway production. Robinson Center Performance Hall.
SPECIAL EVENTS
SEPT. 23: Argenta Reading Series: Jonathan Brown. Argenta United Methodist Church, 5:30 p.m.
OCT. 4: "The Moth." An evening of storytelling. Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m., $38.
OCT. 7: "Henry Rollins: Travel Slideshow Tour." A punk rocker's travelogue. Rev Room, 8 p.m., $31-$155.
OCT. 23-27: "Made By Few 6." Downtown Little Rock, $200-$475.
OCT. 26: "Argenta Reading Series: Edward McPherson." Argenta United Methodist Church, 5:30 p.m.
OCT. 27: "Arkansas Cornbread Festival." Main Street, 11 a.m., free-$10.
OCT. 27: "Arkansas Black Hall of Fame 26th Anniversary Celebration." Robinson Center Performance Hall, 7:30 p.m., $50-$100.
BENTONVILLE
MUSIC
SEPT. 20: Opal Agafia & The Sweet Nothings. Bike Rack Brewing Co.
SEPT. 21: The Baskin Blues Duo. Ramo d'Olivo, 7:30 p.m.
SEPT. 21: Jukebox Confession. The Meteor Guitar Gallery, 8 p.m., $10-$15.
SEPT. 22: Tony Alvarez. Ramo d'Olivo, 7:30 p.m.
SEPT. 22: Forest Concert Series: Kiran Ahluwalia. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., $10.
SEPT. 23: Paco Renteria. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 4 p.m., free.
SEPT. 27: Rozenbridge, Raj Suresh. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 8 p.m., $15.
SEPT. 29: Forest Concert Series: Ahi. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., $10.
OCT. 4: KOBV Brewery Beats. A recurring series from the DJs at 103.3 KOBV-FM. Bike Rack Brewery, 6 p.m.
OCT. 5: Eric Gales. Meteor Guitar Gallery, 8 p.m., $30-$50.
OCT. 6: Forest Concert Series: Orchestral Pow Wow Project. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., $10.
OCT. 19: The Cate Brothers, The Downtown Live Wires. Meteor Guitar Gallery, 7 p.m., $25-$45.
NOV. 2: "Brahms Deconstructed." Symphony of Northwest Arkansas. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 8 p.m., $55.
NOV. 9: Bike Rack Records Release Party. Bike Rack Brewing Co., 7 p.m., $25-$8
VISUAL ART
THROUGH OCT. 8: "The Garden." Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
THROUGH DEC. 31: "Amy Sherald." Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
THROUGH FEBRUARY 2019: "In Conversation: Will Wilson and Edward Curtis." Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
SEPT. 20: Conversation with artist Amy Sherald. 1-2 p.m. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
OCT. 6-JAN. 7, 2019: "Art for a New Understanding: Native Voices, 1950s to Now." Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
OCT. 27-MARCH 2019: "Personal Space." Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. 479-418-5700.
FILM
OCT. 3: Native Voices Film Series: Kyle Bell, Steven Paul Judd. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., free.
OCT. 12: "Reclaiming Native Identity with Anna Tsouhlarakis." Video. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., free.
OCT. 24: Native Voices Film Series: Missy Whiteman. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 7 p.m., free.
CONWAY
MUSIC
SEPT. 20: Buddy Guy. Reynolds Performance Hall, University of Central Arkansas, 7:30 p.m.
SEPT. 21: Kris Lager Band. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 28: El Dub. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 29: Charlotte Taylor & Gypsy Rain. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 5: Opal Agafia & The Sweet Nothings. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 6: Dawson Hollow. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 12: Freeverse. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 13: The Rios. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 19: Clusterpluck. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 20: Waterseed. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 23: Rita Moreno. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m., $15.
OCT. 26: Arkansauce. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
OCT. 27: Cosmocean. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 2: Cadillac Jackson. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 3: Akeem Kemp Band. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 9: Big Red Flag. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 10: Dazz & Brie. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 13: Ten Tenors. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m.
NOV. 16: Trey Johnson. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 17: Mountain Sprout. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 23: The Going Jessies. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 24: Lucky Rooster. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
NOV. 30: Cody Martin Band. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DEC. 1: "Rat Pack Christmas." Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m.
DEC. 1: Groovement. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DEC. 7: Josh Hoyer & Soul Colossal. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DEC. 8: "A Classic Christmas." A pops concert with Arkansas Festival Ballet. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m.
DEC. 12: "Celtic Angels Christmas." Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m.
DEC. 14: Craig Gerdes Band. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DEC. 28: Sad Daddy. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DEC. 31: Jamie Lou & The Hullabaloo, The Squarshers. Kings Live Music, 8:30 p.m., $5.
DANCE
OCT. 14: "Dracula." A Ballet Arkansas production. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m., $32-$40.
OCT. 21: The New Chinese Acrobats. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, $27-$40.
THEATER
SEPT. 21-22: "Driving." A play by Werner Trieschmann. Cabe Theatre, Hendrix College.
OCT. 27-28: "Chicago." A touring Broadway production. Reynolds Performance Hall, UCA, 7:30 p.m. Sat., 2 p.m. Sun., $27-$40.
EL DORADO
MUSIC
SEPT. 20: Charley Crockett. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
SEPT. 27: Barrett Baber. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
SEPT. 29: Million Dollar Quartet. Griffin Music Hall, 8 p.m., $35-$55.
OCT. 4: Bri Bagwell. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
OCT. 5: Identity Crisis. Griffin Restaurant, 9 p.m.
OCT. 6: The Big Dam Horns. Griffin Restaurant, 9 p.m.
OCT. 11: Front Cover Band. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
OCT. 18-20: MusicFest. George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic, Toby Keith, Sammy Hagar & The Circle and more. Murphy Arts District.
OCT. 20: Mary Heather & The Sinners. Griffin Restaurant, 10:30 p.m.
OCT. 20: Gucci Mane. Griffin Music Hall, 8 p.m.
OCT. 25: Eclectic Avenue. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
NOV. 1: Big Piph & Tomorrow Maybe. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
NOV. 8: The Drunken Hearts. Griffin Restaurant, 8 p.m.
THEATER
NOV. 16: Reza: Edge of Illusion. Griffin Music Hall, 8 p.m.
EUREKA SPRINGS
MUSIC
SEPT. 28: Bluegrass & BBQ. Opal Agafia & The Sweet Nothings, Aaron Kamm & The One Drops and more. The Farm, 8 p.m., $30-$55.
OCT. 11-14: Hillberry: The Harvest Moon Festival. Railroad Earth, The Wood Brothers, Trampled By Turtles, Lettuce and more. The Farm, $60-$500.
NOV. 2: Jimmy James. The Aud, 8 p.m.
DEC. 1: John Two Hawks. The Aud, 7 p.m.
DEC. 8: Ozarks Chorale Christmas Concert. The Aud, 6 p.m., $10.
FAYETTEVILLE
MUSIC
SEPT. 20: JJ Grey & Mofro. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $30-$35.
SEPT. 21: Mountain Sprout. George's Majestic Lounge, 9:30 p.m., $8-$10.
SEPT. 21: Mirror Fields, Space4Lease. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
SEPT. 22: Dylan Earl, Dazz & Brie. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 26: Pigeons Playing Ping Pong. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $15-$20.
SEPT. 28: M. Bolez. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
SEPT. 29: Mixx Tenn. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
SEPT. 30: Philip H. Anselmo & The Illegals. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $17-$20.
OCT. 2: The Sword. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $18-$20.
OCT. 4: Read Southall. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $10-$12.
OCT. 5: Combsy. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., $5.
OCT. 6: Ought, Ankle Pop. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 9 p.m., $12-$15.
OCT. 7: Colony House, Brother Moses. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $16-$18.
OCT. 11: Herobust. George's Majestic Lounge, 9 p.m., 20-$23.
OCT. 12: Amy Helm. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $20-$25.
OCT. 13: Syca. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
OCT. 16: Russian Circles, Terminus. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $15-$17.
OCT. 17: Blue October. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $28-$30.
OCT. 18: Ray Wylie Hubbard. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $20-$25.
OCT. 19: Birdtalker. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., $5.
OCT. 20: Rainbow Kitten Surprise. George's Majestic Lounge, 7 p.m., $23-$89.
OCT. 20: Worst Party Ever. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
OCT. 21: Guerilla Toss, The Phlegms, Whoopsi. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 9 p.m., $10-$12.
OCT. 25: Black Lillies. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $12-$15.
OCT. 31: Snails, Cookie Monsta, Svdden Death and more. Fayetteville Town Center, 7 p.m., $28-$30.
OCT. 31: Papadosio. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $20-$25.
NOV. 2: Jason Boland & The Stragglers. George's Majestic Lounge, 9 p.m., $20-$25.
NOV. 2: Branjae. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., $5.
NOV. 7: Penny & Sparrow. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $17-$60.
NOV. 8: Molly Burch, Justin Peter Kinkel-Schuster. Smoke & Barrel Tavern. 9 p.m., $10-$12.
NOV. 9: James McMurtry. George's Majestic Lounge, 9 p.m., $20-$22.
NOV. 10: Rfrsh. Smoke & Barrel Tavern, 10 p.m., free.
NOV. 11: Hayes Carll and Jack Ingram. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $25-$30.
NOV. 13: Sun June. George's Majestic Lounge, 9 p.m., $10-$12.
NOV. 18: The Oh Hellos, Samantha Crain. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., $18-$20.
NOV. 23: The Body, Author & Punisher, Bones of the Earth. George's Majestic Lounge, 9:30 p.m., $8-$10.
NOV. 30: The Randy Rogers Band. George's Majestic Lounge, 9 p.m., $20-$25.
DEC. 9: z Snider. George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m., $25-$30.
DEC. 14: Broncho, White Mansion. George's Majestic Lounge, 9:30 p.m.
DEC. 18: Swearin.' George's Majestic Lounge, 8:30 p.m.
DEC. 28: Big Smith. George's Majestic Lounge, 8 p.m., 9:30 p.m., $20-$25.
THEATER
THROUGH SEPT. 23: "Once." A TheaterSquared production. Walton Arts Center, Studio Theater. OCT. 5-7: "Jersey Boys." Walton Arts Center, Baum Walker Hall.
OCT. 23-28: "School of Rock." Walton Arts Center, Baum Walker Hall.
DEC. 4-9: "Get On Your Feet!" Walton Arts Center, Baum Walker Hall.
FORT SMITH
MUSIC
OCT. 20: "Pops: It's Time For Three!" Fort Smith Symphony. Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
NOV. 12: Ten Tenors. Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
NOV. 29: "Season's Greetings 2018." Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7 p.m.
DEC. 1: "Pops: It's Time For Christmas!" Fort Smith Symphony. Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
DEC. 9: Manheim Steamroller. Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m.
VISUAL ART
THROUGH NOV. 18: "Todd Gray: Pop Geometry." Fort Smith Regional Art Museum.
THROUGH JAN. 27: "Modern Master David Hayes: The Ventana Series." Fort Smith Regional Art Museum.
DEC. 7-MARCH 31, 2019: "Timothy J. Clark: Masterworks on Paper." Fort Smith Regional Art Museum.
DANCE
DEC. 15-16: "The Nutcracker Ballet." A Western Arkansas Ballet production. Arcbest Performing Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. Sat., 2:30 p.m. Sun.
HELENA-
WEST HELENA
MUSIC
OCT. 3-6: King Biscuit Blues Festival. Bobby Rush, Blackberry Smoke, Dave Mason and Steve Cropper and more. Cherry Street.
OCT. 6: Arkansas Times Blues Bus to the King Biscuit Blues Festival. With music from Stephen Koch of Arkansongs. $99.
HOT SPRINGS
MUSIC
SEPT. 21: John Oates & The Good Road Band. Finish Line Theatre, Oaklawn Racing & Gaming, 7 p.m., $40-$55.
SEPT. 21: Crash Blossom, The Luxembourg Trio, Princeaus. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 22: Junction 5. An outdoor gospel music concert, 7 p.m., donations.
SEPT. 22: Sam Pace & The Gilded Grit, Kill Vargas, Adam Faucett. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $7.
SEPT. 23: Stardust Big Band. Arlington Hotel Resort & Spa, Crystal Ballroom, 3 p.m.
SEPT. 27: Ppoacher Ppoacher, Warm Trickle, Whoopsi. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 28: Hooten Hallers, Recognizer. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $7.
SEPT. 28-29: John Calvin Brewer Band. Silks Bar & Grill, Oaklawn Racing & Gaming, 10 p.m.
SEPT. 29: May the Peace of the Sea Be With You, Mouton, Fiscal Spliff. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $7.
OCT. 5-6: Hot Water Hills Music & Arts Festival. Larkin Poe, Broncho, JD Wilkes and more. Hill Wheatley Plaza, 4 p.m. Fri., noon Sat., 15-$25.
OCT. 21: Screaming Females. Low Key Arts, 9 p.m., $10-$15.
NOV. 19: Tom Christopher. An Elvis tribute. Anthony Chapel, Garvan Woodland Gardens, 5 p.m.
NOV. 25: Sharon Turrentine. A holiday concert. Anthony Chapel, Garvan Woodland Gardens., 4 p.m.
NOV. 28: "Voices Rising." A holiday choral concert. Anthony Chapel, Garvan Woodland Gardens, 5:30 p.m.
VISUAL ART
OCT. 4-5: "The Soul of Arkansas." Works by Longhua Xu. Hot Springs Convention Center. 321-2027.
COMEDY
THROUGH DEC. 26: "Ken Goodman: Comedy & The Classics." Hot Springs Bathhouse Dinner Theatre.
DANCE
SEPT. 20: Gold Show Drag Show. Maxine's, 9 p.m., $5.
SEPT. 30: Stardust Big Band. Arlington Resort Hotel & Spa, 3 p.m., $10.
FILM
SEPT. 20-23: Hot Springs International Horror Film Festival. Central Theatre.
OCT. 19-27: Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival. Arlington Resort Hotel & Spa.
THEATER
OCT. 5-14: "The Secret Garden." Pocket Community Theatre.
OCT. 26-27: "Love At First Bite." Murder & Macabre Mystery Theatre. Porterhouse Restaurant, 7 p.m., $40.
NOV. 30-DEC. 9: "Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus." Pocket Community Theatre.
SPECIAL EVENTS
THROUGH OCT. 25: "Driving Miss Daisy." (Thursdays only). Hot Springs Bathhouse Dinner Theatre.
SEPT. 21-23: Spa-Con. With Pam Grier, Sean Maher, Butch Patrick and more. Hot Springs Convention Center.
SEPT. 23: Olivia Gatwood. A spoken word performance from Low Key Arts. Kollective Coffee, 6 p.m., $5.
OCT. 5-7: Hot Springs Arts & Crafts Fair. Garland County Fairgrounds.
NOV. 17: Northwoods Mountain Bike Trail Grand Opening. Cedar Glades Trail Head, 461 Wildcat Road, noon, free.
JONESBORO, NEWPORT
MUSIC
SEPT. 28-29: Depot Days Festival. Rodney Crowell, Earl & Them and more. Rock 'n' Roll Highway 67 Museum, Newport.
OCT. 18-20: Johnny Cash Heritage Festival. Dyess, free-$100.
DEC. 6: M-PACT. Fowler Center, Arkansas State University, Jonesboro. 7:30 p.m.
VISUAL ART
THROUGH OCT. 10: "Pink." Multimedia group show. Arkansas State University, Jonesboro.
SPECIAL EVENTS
NOV. 5: "The Magic of David Gerrard." Fowler Center, Arkansas State University, Jonesboro, 7:30 p.m.
PINE BLUFF
VISUAL ART
THROUGH OCT. 27: "Small but Mighty." Works from the permanent collection. Arts and Science Center for Southeast Arkansas. 870-536-3375.
THROUGH NOV. 3: "UAPB & ASC: Five Decades of Collaboration." Arts and Science Center for Southeast Arkansas. 870-536-3375.
THROUGH NOV. 10: Pine Bluff Art League Juried Exhibition. Arts and Science Center for Southeast Arkansas. 870-536-3375.
ROGERS/SPRINGDALE
MUSIC
SEPT. 26: 5 Seconds of Summer. Walmart AMP, Rogers, 8 p.m., $30-$145.
SEPT. 27: Needtobreathe. Walmart AMP, Rogers, 7 p.m., $30-$65.
SEPT. 28: Roby Pantall Jazz Duo. Sassafras Springs Vineyard, Springdale, 6 p.m., free.
SEPT. 28: Lynyrd Skynyrd. Walmart AMP, Rogers, 7 p.m., $40-$220.
OCT. 3: Odesza. Walmart AMP, Rogers, 7 p.m., $26-$125.
OCT. 4: CongaKeyz Jazz Duo. Sassafras Springs Vineyard, Springdale, 6 p.m., free.
OCT. 13: Second Line Strings. Sassafras Springs Vineyard, Springdale, 6 p.m., free.
OCT. 13: "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets." With accompaniment from Symphony of Northwest Arkansas. Walmart AMP, Rogers, 7 p.m., $22-$75.
VISUAL ART
THROUGH SEPT. 22: "Sarah Hearn: An Unnatural History." Arts Center of the Ozarks, Springdale.
THROUGH SEPT. 28: "Sensory Iconoclast." Arts Center of the Ozarks, Springdale, Springdale.
OCT. 2-NOV. 3: "5X5 Annual Exhibition." Arts Center of the Ozarks, Springdale.
NOV. 10-JAN. 7: "Frida in the Garden." Arts Center of the Ozarks, Springdale.
Fall Arts 2018 calendar
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oldisnewradio · 4 years
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Tonight on The Penthouse Edition of Everything Old Is New Again Radio Show,we’ve added MORE songs by Andrea Marcovicci. 
Some of the songs from her career that we will hear:* "Once In A Blue Moon"* Billy Joel'S "Summer, Highland Falls"* "On Such A Night As This" (HUGH MARTIN / MARSHALL BARER)* "Smile"* and "Crossing Time" written by Shelly Markham & LESLEY ALEXANDER 
plus songs by John Bucchino, Irving Berlin, FRANCESCA BLUMENTH, STEPHEN SONDHIEM, @FRANK LOESSER, Kander & Ebb, Cy Coleman * And More! 
 Tune in at 9PM at thepenthouse.fm
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ao3feed-mcshep · 7 years
Text
Twice Alien
read it on the AO3 at http://ift.tt/2lBGDRU
by Seaward
John Sheppard AKA John Serano AKA Bug Boy, stumbles into the Stargate Program via Dr. Beckett's back door. Rodney McKay has known John for years, but only recently discovered he could talk. None of them are expecting who or what they find when they reach Atlantis...
Words: 126688, Chapters: 4/4, Language: English
Fandoms: Stargate Atlantis
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: M/M
Characters: Rodney McKay, John Sheppard, Dave Sheppard, Patrick Sheppard, Carson Beckett, Elizabeth Weir, Daniel Jackson, Jack O'Neill, Radek Zelenka, Peter Kavanagh, Marshall Sumner, Markham (Stargate), Stackhouse (Stargate), Miko Kusanagi, Peter Grodin, Katie Brown, David Parrish (Stargate), Bates (Stargate), Aiden Ford, Ronon Dex, Chuck (Stargate), Thaddeus Ross
Relationships: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard, Carson Beckett/Ronon Dex
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Cultural Differences, Identity Issues, Genetics, Mutant Powers, mentions of marvel universe characters, Canon Character of Color, mentions of past relationship, Wraith, Circus
read it on the AO3 at http://ift.tt/2lBGDRU
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Senator Michael Hastings | Latest News from Illinois State
Michael Hastings is a state senator for Illinois district who assumed office in 2013. Born on 6th October 1980, Hastings is a senator from the district 19 which includes the part of New Lenox, Lockport, Orland Park, Tinley Park, Frankfort, Joliet Richton Park, Matteson Homewood, Park Forest, Olympia Fields, Hazel Crest, Oak Forest, Markham, Flossmoor, University Park and Frankfort Square. Before getting in his political career, Hastings was a United States Army’s Officer, a vice president of the school board and a businessman.
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Senator Michael Hastings graduated from West Point and became an officer in the US Army. He served Iraq with an advanced rank of Captain and introduced himself in politics with the election of Board of Trustees for High School District 230. He earned his master’s degree from the University of Illinois and also got his doctorate from John Marshall Law School in Chicago.
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Michael Hastings Illinois has contributed immensely to public services. He created a plan to fight the pension shortfall in association with the University of Illinois Institute for Government and Public Affairs. He also sponsored the funding for the development of a new airport in Peotone. The airport is going to be built under a public-private partnership which will create thousands of job opportunities for the residents of Southland.
Michael Hastings Tinley Park has gotten the plan for the development of the 30-bedded psychiatric hospital in Tinley Park approved. The hospital is going to be very helpful for the children and the adolescents in the southern suburbs who are in need of inpatient treatment. As the nearby area is devoid of any inpatient mental health care, the hospital is going to be a real solution for the problem that was causing inconvenience to the community of the local area.
Hastings made sure that all the resources are used properly, which is why he is pushing the state police to utilize the vacant Lincoln-Way North High school. The extra-large campus can be used to create a forensic lab which will also develop the area economically. The school was closed in 2016 and since then it is vacant.
Hastings has worked very hard to provide the economic benefit to the community, which makes him one of the most renowned senators.
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savetopnow · 7 years
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2018-03-17 09 NEWS now
NEWS
Associated Press
The Latest: Creighton's Marcus Foster struggles early
Student watched helplessly as bridge came down on top of car
Appeals court nixes some FCC rules on robocalls
Trump's possible China tariffs bring loud protests _ in US
Report: Abortion is safe but barriers reduce quality of care
BBC News
Swiss pianist gives concert on ice in northern Baltic Sea
John F Kennedy's lost 'last' speech recreated
The women bringing animated adventures to life
Brazil protests over slain politician Marielle Franco
Skiers jump from speeding lift in Georgia
Chicago Tribune
Archive of Studs Terkel WFMT radio shows to be released to public
Man shot at, crashes car into fire hydrant after attempted armed robbery: Skokie police
Bellwood man gets 70-year prison sentence for killing off-duty Cook County sheriff's investigator
Man in serious condition after shooting in West Englewood
Husband apprehended in wife's fatal shooting in Markham that sparked Amber Alert
LA Times
Saturday's TV highlights and weekend talk shows: 'The Beguiled' on HBO and more
News-Press Cartoon: Rent Control
Cal State Fullerton can't keep up with Purdue, falls 74-48 in first-round game
Leader Cartoon: Rent Control
Purdue quickly ends Cal State Fullerton's upset dreams
NPR News
Maryland Gets Closer To Retiring State Song That Calls Northerners 'Scum'
From Pride To Protest: How Russians Feel About Their Presidential Election
Debate On Role Of Islam Divides German Government
Black Man Beaten At Charlottesville White Nationalist Rally Is Acquitted Of Assault
Invisibilia: Inspired By 'American Idol,' Somali TV Show Aimed To Change The World
New York Times
Qualcomm’s Ex-Chairman to Leave Amid Plans to Buy Company
F.A.A. Halts All ‘Doors-Off’ Helicopter Flights After New York Crash
Trump, the Television President, Expands His Cast
March Madness 2018 Live Updates: NCAA Tournament Scores by Region
Fact Check: How Trump Has Split With His Administration on Russian Meddling
ProPublica
Jacksonville Sheriff Admits Race May Have Played a Role in Ticket Writing
The FBI — ‘Fidelity, Bravery, Integrity’ — Still Working on Diversity
Getting to Know Illinois — And You
Correction: Trump’s Pick to Head CIA Did Not Oversee Waterboarding of Abu Zubaydah
Flawed Assessments Caused $2 Billion Shift in Property Taxes, Study Finds
Reddit News
FBI and Ithaca Police Find AR-15, Bomb-Like Devices in Former Cornell Student’s Apartment
Nikolai Glushkov: Russian exile murdered at London home by 'compression to neck', police say
Black man beaten in Charlottesville found not guilty of assaulting white supremacist
Judge Vance Day -- who wouldn't marry same-sex couples -- suspended for 3 years
Cramer on 2008 crisis: It could happen again 'because no one went to jail the first time'
Reuters
Steel, aluminum product exclusions from U.S. tariffs may take 90 days: document
Exclusive: European powers propose new Iran sanctions to meet Trump ultimatum
Civilians flee as two big Syria battles enter decisive phases
South Africa hits fallen Zuma with arms deal corruption charges
Caterpillar's latest restructuring move could cut 880 jobs
Reveal News
Nation’s largest janitorial company faces new allegations of rape
A group of janitors started a movement to stop sexual abuse
The Hate Report: How white supremacists recruit online
New documents about Jehovah’s Witnesses’ sex abuse begin to leak out
California is preparing to defend its waters from Trump order
The Altantic
West Virginia's Teachers Are Not Satisfied
This Average Joe Is the Most Quoted Man in News
The Unsinkable Benjamin Netanyahu?
Eric Garcetti Isn't Expecting Much From Washington
The Particular Horror of Church Shootings
The Guardian
NCAA tournament: Nevada avoid upset in thriller; Wichita State shocked by Marshall – live scores
Adrian Lamo, hacker who turned in Chelsea Manning, dies aged 37
Tiger Woods seven adrift of Bay Hill leaders after second-round 72
Aung San Suu Kyi: lawyers seek prosecution for crimes against humanity
Gina Haspel should be arrested – not put in charge of the CIA | Vincent Warren
The Independent
Government 'using devolution as an excuse' to avoid abortion reform in Northern Ireland, campaigners warn
Polar bear cub born in Britain for the first time in 25 years
Nikolai Glushkov: Who was the exiled Russian businessman murdered in London?
Nikolai Glushkov: Ten deaths on British soil that have been linked to Russia
Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho: It will be 'difficult' to compete with Manchester City next season
The Intercept
Dismay in Ireland as Leader Who Promised to Confront Trump Boasts of Aiding Him
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The Assassination of Human Rights Activist Marielle Franco Was a Huge Loss for Brazil — and the World
Hackers Are So Fed Up With Twitter Bots They’re Hunting Them Down Themselves
Betsy DeVos Is Now Fighting the Union at the Education Department
The Quartz
Three tech billionaires secretly gave $2.54 billion to Goldman’s philanthropy fund
Theranos inflated its revenue by about $108 million when it was pitching investors
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Goldman is making its huge UK gender pay gap worse with how it awards bonuses
Wall Street Journal
Better Off Than Their Parents: Why Russia's Youth Are Backing Putin
U.K. Accuses Putin Over Poison Attack as Police Launch Probe into Exile's Death
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U.S. and South Korean Presidents Discuss North Korea Nuclear Talks
France, Germany Seek to Overcome Differences on Eurozone
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biofunmy · 5 years
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Overlooked No More: Mihri Rassim, Feminist Artist in the Ottoman Empire
Overlooked is a series of obituaries about remarkable people whose deaths, beginning in 1851, went unreported in The Times.
Mihri Rassim was one of the most intriguing Turkish artists of her day — but she was known more for her eccentric lifestyle than for her art.
She shunned her royal upbringing by running away from home to pursue an arts education, and to secure the freedoms that the Ottoman Empire didn’t provide to women in the early 1900s.
She was a pioneer, opening the first art college for women in Turkey, and encouraged artists for decades. And she was a cunning marketer who sometimes bent the truth about her artwork as a way to support herself when the going got rough.
“She was an avant-garde artist whose most avant-garde work was her own life,” said the art historian Ozlem Gulin Dagoglu, who is writing a monograph on her.
Rassim was representative of an era toward the end of the Ottoman Empire when the daughters of the elite were encouraged to learn about art, literature and music but then limited to becoming art teachers, if they were fortunate to have careers at all. Historians are now trying to piece together the stories of their lives; an exhibition of Rassim’s work was held this year at the SALT Galata, an art institution in Istanbul.
Rassim was born on Dec. 13, 1885, in Istanbul. She used variations of her name throughout her life. Her father, Ahmed Rasim Pasha, was a military doctor; her mother, Fatma Nesedil Hanim, was an Abkhazian princess. Mihri began painting when she was young, taking lessons from Fausto Zonaro, the Italian court painter for the ruling sultan, Abdul Hamid II.
At the time, there were no college-level art schools for women in the Ottoman Empire, so Rassim left her family in about 1906 to study at the Académie de France in Rome and the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Recognized for her skill in portraiture, she went on to paint many powerful men.
While in Europe, she worked with John Singer Sargent, Léon Bonnat, Albert Besnard, Arthur Kampf, Rudolf Bacher and other painters, and she met and married Musfik Selami Bey, a Sorbonne student who later became a diplomat of the new Turkish republic.
The couple moved back to Istanbul in 1912. It was a good time to return. Most forms of Western art had been banned there for centuries, but the winds of change that had helped nation-states sprout across Europe were transforming Turkey as well.
Rassim saw an opportunity to propose that an art school be established for women. “Ideas of freedom, equality, justice, comradeship have arrived in our country,” she was quoted as saying in addressing the minister of education in 1914, “but why is it only men that are benefiting from them?”
The School of Fine Arts for Women opened the next year, with Rassim at the helm, alongside the painter Omer Adil Bey.
“Under her tutelage, Muslim women were able to paint landscapes en plein air, and draw from nude female models as well as antique statues,” Dagoglu, the art historian, said.
While Rassim helped start the careers of artists like Fahrelnissa Zeid, who became known for her large-scale abstract paintings, she still yearned to be recognized for her own artwork. It was a sentiment she expressed in 1919, when she organized a show of paintings in her home and was interviewed by the journalist Mehmed Zekeriya Sertel for Buyuk Mecmua magazine.
She criticized the limitations that her conservative society had imposed on women, preventing them from becoming better painters. It was frowned upon, for instance, for women to paint in public.
“This is why women mostly painted friends and acquaintances in interiors,” Dagoglu said.
Rassim brushed off her portraiture as “worthless” and insinuated in the interview that she wished she had better work to show. “I am ashamed to call this my oeuvre,” she was quoted as saying.
“I make most of these paintings you see here for commerce,” she added.
Later in 1919, when the Allied powers occupied Istanbul in the wake of World War I, Rassim went back to Rome, divorced her husband and mingled with the fascist cultural elite under the fast-rising Benito Mussolini. She became friendly with the poet Gabriele D’Annunzio and the sculptor Renato Brozzi, and through their connections she painted a portrait of Mussolini himself.
She also tried to open an art academy for Turkish students in Rome and painted a portrait of the new Turkish president, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, to convince him of her abilities and perhaps to charm him. Unable to gain his favor, though, she left Europe in 1927 for the United States to pursue her artistic ambitions there. She found work as a high school art teacher in Connecticut.
“I did not come to the United States as a famished immigrant to make money,” she wrote in 1935 in a letter to Hamilton Holt, the dean of Rollins College, near Orlando, Fla., “but had an ideal in mind: to be considered among the talented people.”
Rollins had offered her a teaching job, but she wasn’t able to accept it because of her immigration status.
“As an immigrant woman artist, the post-Depression era was especially hard for Rassim,” Dagoglu said, “but she was a resilient and resourceful artist with a knack for marketing.”
As she sought to build a career, she moved to New York, where she highlighted her Turkish nobility, calling herself Princess Alciba, her Abkhazian family name. She held salons at her Manhattan home and participated in group and solo exhibitions in galleries.
In April 1932, for the poet Edwin Markham’s 80th birthday celebration at Carnegie Hall, she presented him with his portrait as a gift in front of 2,000 people.
But despite her moderate success, she struggled to support herself. In September 1932, to pay her debtors, the New York City marshal auctioned off her portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt for $40 ($688 in today’s dollars). She had valued the painting at $2,000 (about $37,500 today).
Dagoglu said that after Thomas Edison died in 1931, Rassim tried to sell a portrait of him to his family, saying in a letter that he had posed for her. But Dagoglu found that she had actually based the painting on a photograph.
That portrait, showing Edison deep in thought in his lab, was rediscovered in 2011 and is now at the Cornell Fine Arts Museum at Rollins College.
In 1931, she married Salvatore Virzi, a singer at the Metropolitan Opera. She became an American citizen in 1943.
Rassim died in 1954. She was about 69. She was believed to have been buried in a potter’s field in or near New York, but Dagoglu was unable to find any records of any of the names that Rassim might have used.
Many of the paintings she made in the United States are considered missing — she was a poor record keeper and newspaper accounts say that her studio was once robbed — but, like the Edison painting, they are slowly being found.
One of her later portraits, of Rezzan Yalman, the wife of the prominent Turkish journalist Ahmed Emin Yalman, whom Rassim befriended in the early 1940s in New York, was recently discovered in a private family collection. It was included in the SALT Galata exhibition in Istanbul.
Berna Gencalp, a filmmaker who had helped put together that exhibit, is working on a documentary about Rassim, titled “Kim Mihri” (“Who Is Mihri?”), which is expected to be released next year.
“We don’t know if she achieved all her goals,” Gencalp said in an interview, “but she definitely came ‘to be considered among the talented.’”
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soulbounce · 5 years
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【衝撃】ユニバーサル火災でマスターテープが焼失したアーティスト一覧
他の国にマスターのコピーがあることを祈ります。 38 Special 50 Cent Colonel Abrams Johnny Ace Bryan Adams Nat Adderley Aerosmith Rhett Akins Manny Albam Lorez Alexandria Gary Allan Red Allen Steve Allen The Ames Brothers Gene Ammons Bill Anderson Jimmy Anderson John Anderson The Andrews Sisters Lee Andrews & the Hearts Paul Anka Adam Ant Toni Arden Joan Armatrading Louis Armstrong Asia Asleep at the Wheel Audioslave Patti Austin Average White Band Hoyt Axton Albert Ayler Burt Bacharach Joan Baez Razzy Bailey Chet Baker Florence Ballard Hank Ballard Gato Barbieri Baja Marimba Band Len Barry Count Basie Fontella Bass The Beat Farmers Sidney Bechet and His Orchestra Beck Captain Beefheart Archie Bell & the Drells Vincent Bell Bell Biv Devoe Louie Bellson Don Bennett Joe Bennett and the Sparkletones David Benoit George Benson Berlin Elmer Bernstein and His Orchestra Chuck Berry Nuno Bettencourt Stephen Bishop Blackstreet Art Blakey Hal Blaine Bobby (Blue) Bland Mary J. Blige Blink 182 Blues Traveler Eddie Bo Pat Boone Boston Connee Boswell Eddie Boyd Jan Bradley Owen Bradley Quintet Oscar Brand Bob Braun Walter Brennan Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats Teresa Brewer Edie Brickell & New Bohemians John Brim Lonnie Brooks Big Bill Broonzy and Washboard Sam Brothers Johnson Bobby Brown Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown Lawrence Brown Les Brown Marion Brown Marshall Brown Mel Brown Michael Brown Dave Brubeck Jimmy Buffett Carol Burnett T-Bone Burnett Dorsey Burnette Johnny Burnette Busta Rhymes Terry Callier Cab Calloway The Call Glen Campbell Captain and Tennille Captain Sensible Irene Cara Belinda Carlisle Carl Carlton Eric Carmen Hoagy Carmichael Kim Carnes Karen Carpenter Richard Carpenter The Carpenters Barbara Carr Betty Carter Benny Carter The Carter Family Peter Case Alvin Cash Mama Cass Bobby Charles Ray Charles Chubby Checker The Checkmates Ltd. Cheech & Chong Cher Don Cherry Mark Chesnutt The Chi-Lites Eric Clapton Petula Clark Roy Clark Gene Clark The Clark Sisters Merry Clayton Jimmy Cliff Patsy Cline Rosemary Clooney Wayne Cochran Joe Cocker Ornette Coleman Gloria Coleman Mitty Collier Jazzbo Collins Judy Collins Colosseum Alice Coltrane John Coltrane Colours Common Cookie and the Cupcakes Barbara Cook Rita Coolidge Stewart Copeland The Corsairs Dave “Baby” Cortez Bill Cosby Don Costa Clifford Coulter David Crosby Crosby & Nash Johnny Cougar (aka John Cougar Mellencamp) Counting Crows Coverdale?Page Warren Covington Deborah Cox James “Sugar Boy” Crawford Crazy Otto Marshall Crenshaw The Crew-Cuts Sonny Criss David Crosby Bob Crosby Bing Crosby Sheryl Crow Rodney Crowell The Crusaders Xavier Cugat The Cuff Links Tim Curry The Damned Danny & the Juniors Rodney Dangerfield Bobby Darin Helen Darling David + David Mac Davis Richard Davis Sammy Davis Jr. Chris de Burgh Lenny Dee Jack DeJohnette The Dells The Dell-Vikings Sandy Denny Sugar Pie DeSanto The Desert Rose Band Dennis DeYoung Neil Diamond Bo Diddley Difford & Tilbrook Dillard & Clark The Dixie Hummingbirds Willie Dixon DJ Shadow Fats Domino Jimmy Donley Kenny Dorham Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra Lee Dorsey The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra Lamont Dozier The Dramatics The Dream Syndicate Roy Drusky Jimmy Durante Deanna Durbin The Eagles Steve Earle El Chicano Danny Elfman Yvonne Elliman Duke Ellington Cass Elliott Joe Ely John Entwistle Eminem Eric B. and Rakim Gil Evans Paul Evans Betty Everett Don Everly Extreme The Falcons Harold Faltermeyer Donna Fargo Art Farmer Freddie Fender Ferrante & Teicher Fever Tree The Fifth Dimension Ella Fitzgerald Five Blind Boys Of Alabama The Fixx The Flamingos King Floyd The Flying Burrito Brothers John Fogerty Red Foley Eddie Fontaine The Four Aces The Four Tops Peter Frampton Franke & the Knockouts Aretha Franklin The Rev. 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Franklin The Free Movement Glenn Frey Lefty Frizzell Curtis Fuller Jerry Fuller Lowell Fulson Harvey Fuqua Nelly Furtado Hank Garland Judy Garland Erroll Garner Jimmy Garrison Larry Gatlin & the Gatlin Brothers Gene Loves Jezebel Barry Gibb Georgia Gibbs Terri Gibbs Dizzy Gillespie Gin Blossoms Tompall Glaser Tom Glazer Whoopi Goldberg Golden Earring Paul Gonsalves Benny Goodman Dexter Gordon Rosco Gordon Lesley Gore The Gospelaires Teddy Grace Grand Funk Railroad Amy Grant Earl Grant The Grass Roots Dobie Gray Buddy Greco Keith Green Al Green Jack Greene Robert Greenidge Lee Greenwood Patty Griffin Nanci Griffith Dave Grusin Guns N’ Roses Buddy Guy Buddy Hackett Charlie Haden Merle Haggard Bill Haley and His Comets Aaron Hall Lani Hall Chico Hamilton George Hamilton IV Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds Marvin Hamlisch Jan Hammer Lionel Hampton John Handy Glass Harp Slim Harpo Richard Harris Freddie Harts Dan Hartman Johnny Hartman Coleman Hawkins Dale Hawkins Richie Havens Roy Haynes Head East Heavy D. & the Boyz Bobby Helms Don Henley Clarence “Frogman” Henry Woody Herman and His Orchestra Milt Herth and His Trio John Hiatt Al Hibbler Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks Monk Higgins Jessie Hill Earl Hines Roger Hodgson Hole Billie Holiday Jennifer Holliday Buddy Holly The Hollywood Flames Eddie Holman John Lee Hooker Stix Hooper Bob Hope Paul Horn Shirley Horn Big Walter Horton Thelma Houston Rebecca Lynn Howard Jan Howard Freddie Hubbard Humble Pie Engelbert Humperdinck Brian Hyland The Impressions The Ink Spots Iron Butterfly Burl Ives Janet Jackson Joe Jackson Milt Jackson Ahmad Jamal Etta James Elmore James James Gang Keith Jarrett Jason & the Scorchers Jawbreaker Garland Jeffreys Beverly Jenkins Gordon Jenkins The Jets Jimmy Eat World Jodeci Johnnie Joe The Joe Perry Project Elton John J.J. 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Lenoir Ramsey Lewis Jerry Lee Lewis Jerry Lewis Meade Lux Lewis Liberace Lifehouse Enoch Light The Lightning Seeds Limp Bizkit Lisa Loeb Little Axe and the Golden Echoes Little Milton Little River Band Little Walter Lobo Nils Lofgren Lone Justice Guy Lombardo Lord Tracy The Louvin Brothers Love Patti Loveless The Lovelites Lyle Lovett Love Unlimited Loretta Lynn L.T.D. Lynyrd Skynyrd Gloria Lynne Moms Mabley Willie Mabon Warner Mack Dave MacKay & Vicky Hamilton Miriam Makeba The Mamas and the Papas Melissa Manchester Barbara Mandrell Chuck Mangione Shelly Manne Wade Marcus Mark-Almond Pigmeat Markham Steve Marriott Wink Martindale Groucho Marx Hugh Masekela Dave Mason Jerry Mason Matthews Southern Comfort The Mavericks Robert Maxwell John Mayall Percy Mayfield Lyle Mays Les McCann Delbert McClinton Robert Lee McCollum Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr. Van McCoy Jimmy McCracklin Jack McDuff Reba McEntire Gary McFarland Barry McGuire The McGuire Sisters Duff McKagan Maria McKee McKendree Spring Marian McPartland Clyde McPhatter Carmen McRae Jack McVea Meat Loaf Memphis Slim Sergio Mendes Ethel Merman Pat Metheny Mighty Clouds of Joy Roger Miller Stephanie Mills The Mills Brothers Liza Minnelli Charles Mingus Joni Mitchell Bill Monroe Vaughn Monroe Wes Montgomery Buddy Montgomery The Moody Blues The Moonglows Jane Morgan Russ Morgan Ennio Morricone Mos Def Martin Mull Gerry Mulligan Milton Nascimento Johnny Nash Nazareth Nelson Rick Nelson & the Stone Canyon Band Ricky Nelson Jimmy Nelson Oliver Nelson Aaron Neville Art Neville The Neville Brothers New Edition New Riders of the Purple Sage Olivia Newton-John Night Ranger Leonard Nimoy Nine Inch Nails Nirvana The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band No Doubt Ken Nordine Red Norvo Sextet Terri Nunn The Oak Ridge Boys Ric Ocasek Phil Ochs Hazel O’Connor Chico O’Farrill Oingo Boingo The O’Jays Spooner Oldham One Flew South Yoko Ono Orleans Jeffrey Osborne The Outfield Pablo Cruise Jackie Paris Leo Parker Junior Parker Ray Parker Jr. Dolly Parton Les Paul Freda Payne Peaches & Herb Ce Ce Peniston The Peppermint Rainbow Pepples The Persuasions Bernadette Peters Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers John Phillips Webb Pierce The Pinetoppers Bill Plummer Poco The Pointer Sisters The Police Doc Pomus Jimmy Ponder Iggy Pop Billy Preston Lloyd Price Louis Prima Primus Puddle Of Mudd Red Prysock Leroy Pullins The Pussycat Dolls Quarterflash Queen Latifah Sun Ra The Radiants Gerry Rafferty Kenny Rankin The Ray Charles Singers The Ray-O-Vacs The Rays Dewey Redman Della Reese Martha Reeves R.E.M. Debbie Reynolds Emitt Rhodes Buddy Rich Emil Richards Dannie Richmond Riders in the Sky Stan Ridgway Frazier River Sam Rivers Max Roach Marty Roberts Howard Roberts The Roches Chris Rock Tommy Roe Jimmy Rogers Sonny Rollins The Roots Rose Royce Jackie Ross Doctor Ross Rotary Connection The Rover Boys Roswell Rudd Rufus and Chaka Khan Otis Rush Brenda Russell Leon Russell Pee Wee Russell Russian Jazz Quartet Mitch Ryder Buffy Sainte-Marie Joe Sample Pharoah Sanders The Sandpipers Gary Saracho Shirley Scott Tom Scott Dawn Sears Neil Sedaka Jeannie Seely Semisonic Charlie Sexton Marlena Shaw Tupac Shakur Archie Shepp Dinah Shore Ben Sidran Silver Apples Shel Silverstein The Simon Sisters Ashlee Simpson The Simpsons Zoot Sims P.F. Sloan Smash Mouth Kate Smith Keely Smith Tab Smith Patti Smyth Snoop Dogg Valaida Snow Jill Sobule Soft Machine Sonic Youth Sonny and Cher The Soul Stirrers Soundgarden Eddie South Southern Culture on the Skids Spinal Tap Banana Splits The Spokesmen Squeeze Jo Stafford Chris Stamey Joe Stampley Michael Stanley Kay Starr Stealers Wheel Steely Dan Gwen Stefani Steppenwolf Cat Stevens Billy Stewart Sting Sonny Stitt Shane Stockton George Strait The Strawberry Alarm Clock Strawbs Styx Sublime Yma Sumac Andy Summers The Sundowners Supertramp The Surfaris Sylvia Syms Gabor Szabo The Tams Grady Tate t.A.T.u. Koko Taylor Billy Taylor Charlie Teagarden Temple of the Dog Clark Terry Tesla Sister Rosetta Tharpe Robin Thicke Toots Thielemans B.J. Thomas Irma Thomas Rufus Thomas Hank Thompson Lucky Thompson Big Mama Thornton Three Dog Night The Three Stooges Tiffany Mel Tillis Tommy & the Tom Toms Mel Torme The Tragically Hip The Trapp Family Singers Ralph Tresvant Ernest Tubb The Tubes Tanya Tucker Tommy Tucker The Tune Weavers Ike Turner Stanley Turrentine Conway Twitty McCoy Tyner Phil Upchurch Michael Utley Leroy Van Dyke Gino Vannelli Van Zant Billy Vaughan Suzanne Vega Vega Brothers Veruca Salt The Vibrations Bobby Vinton Voivod Porter Wagoner The Waikikis Rufus Wainwright Rick Wakeman Jerry Jeff Walker The Wallflowers Joe Walsh Wang Chung Clara Ward Warrior Soul Washboard Sam Was (Not Was) War Justine Washington The Watchmen Muddy Waters Jody Watley Johnny “Guitar” Watson The Weavers The Dream Weavers Ben Webster Weezer We Five George Wein Lenny Welch Lawrence Welk Kitty Wells Mae West Barry White Michael White Slappy White Whitesnake White Zombie The Who Whycliffe Kim Wilde Don Williams Jody Williams John Williams Larry Williams Lenny Williams Leona Williams Paul Williams Roger Williams Sonny Boy Williamson Walter Winchell Kai Winding Johnny Winter Wishbone Ash Jimmy Witherspoon Howlin’ Wolf Bobby Womack Lee Ann Womack Phil Woods Wrecks-N-Effect O.V. Wright Bill Wyman Rusty York Faron Young Neil Young Young Black Teenagers Y & T Rob Zombie
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mcshep-everyday · 7 years
Link
Chapters: 4/4 Fandom: Stargate Atlantis Rating: Explicit Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Rodney McKay/John Sheppard, Carson Beckett/Ronon Dex Characters: Rodney McKay, John Sheppard, Dave Sheppard, Patrick Sheppard, Carson Beckett, Elizabeth Weir, Daniel Jackson, Jack O'Neill, Radek Zelenka, Peter Kavanagh, Marshall Sumner, Markham (Stargate), Stackhouse (Stargate), Miko Kusanagi, Peter Grodin, Katie Brown, David Parrish (Stargate), Bates (Stargate), Aiden Ford, Ronon Dex, Chuck (Stargate), Thaddeus Ross Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Cultural Differences, Identity Issues, Genetics, Mutant Powers, mentions of marvel universe characters, Canon Character of Color, mentions of past relationship, Wraith, Circus Summary:
John Sheppard AKA John Serano AKA Bug Boy, stumbles into the Stargate Program via Dr. Beckett's back door. Rodney McKay has known John for years, but only recently discovered he could talk. None of them are expecting who or what they find when they reach Atlantis...
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gtarealestatepros · 6 years
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GTA Listings March 8th 2019
The Best Homes for Sale as of March 8th 2019.
You can find what you're looking for right here in our compilation of all of the house listings across the GTA. This list is updated as of March 8th 2019. Come search and find a home in the neighbourhood in the GTA you want.
Street and TownMLS CodeLink 147 Oxford St, Richmond HillN4376682147 Oxford St, Richmond Hill 17879 Regional Rd 50 Rd, CaledonW437587417879 Regional Rd 50 Rd, Caledon 148 Mulock Ave, TorontoW4372825148 Mulock Ave, Toronto 1438 Redwing Crt, OakvilleW43758961438 Redwing Crt, Oakville 8733 Heritage Rd, BramptonW43741068733 Heritage Rd, Brampton 301 Glebemount Ave, TorontoE4375997301 Glebemount Ave, Toronto 102 Golden Tr, VaughanN4374559102 Golden Tr, Vaughan 17 Lilly Valley Cres, KingN437316617 Lilly Valley Cres, King 17 Cypress Point Crt, MarkhamN437577717 Cypress Point Crt, Markham 208 Acton Ave, TorontoC4375785208 Acton Ave, Toronto 38 Shadow Falls Dr, Richmond HillN437501438 Shadow Falls Dr, Richmond Hill 575 Davos Rd, VaughanN4374518575 Davos Rd, Vaughan 1 Highgrove Cres, Richmond HillN43750481 Highgrove Cres, Richmond Hill 2116 Munns Ave, OakvilleW43728982116 Munns Ave, Oakville 9823 Corkery Rd Hamilton, TownshipX43766899823 Corkery Rd Hamilton, Township 161 E Lake Dr, GeorginaN4374201161 E Lake Dr, Georgina 52 Hall St, Richmond HillN437564152 Hall St, Richmond Hill 44 Cobblestone Dr, TorontoC437563244 Cobblestone Dr, Toronto 185 Degraaf Cres, AuroraN4376346185 Degraaf Cres, Aurora 210 Milkweed Way, OakvilleW4376455210 Milkweed Way, Oakville 69 Raintree Cres, Richmond HillN437684669 Raintree Cres, Richmond Hill 136 Boultbee Ave, TorontoE4375698136 Boultbee Ave, Toronto 144 Regent St, Richmond HillN4374126144 Regent St, Richmond Hill 3695 Yonge St Bradford, West GwillimburyN43749883695 Yonge St Bradford, West Gwillimbury 31 Daphnia Dr, VaughanN437647131 Daphnia Dr, Vaughan 16360 The Gore Rd, CaledonW437287316360 The Gore Rd, Caledon 35 Kennard Ave, TorontoC437409235 Kennard Ave, Toronto 54 Highgrove Cres, Richmond HillN437529454 Highgrove Cres, Richmond Hill 122 Lloyd Sanderson Dr, BramptonW4375430122 Lloyd Sanderson Dr, Brampton 33 Minto St, TorontoE437697733 Minto St, Toronto 10115 Britannia Rd, MiltonW437552710115 Britannia Rd, Milton 1182 Fairmeadow Tr, OakvilleW43773551182 Fairmeadow Tr, Oakville 91 Taunton Rd, TorontoC437521791 Taunton Rd, Toronto 13 Smallwood Rd, BramptonW437578213 Smallwood Rd, Brampton 6911A Hickling Cres, MississaugaW43734706911A Hickling Cres, Mississauga 138 Goulding Ave, TorontoC4374451138 Goulding Ave, Toronto 133 Wheat Boom Dr, OakvilleW4375157133 Wheat Boom Dr, Oakville 19 Via Campanile, VaughanN437380119 Via Campanile, Vaughan 1067 Albertson Cres, MississaugaW43762531067 Albertson Cres, Mississauga 55 Aileen Rd, MarkhamN437654455 Aileen Rd, Markham 6 Wolfson Cres, Richmond HillN43751136 Wolfson Cres, Richmond Hill 84 Cavehill Cres, TorontoE437403484 Cavehill Cres, Toronto 22 Kenneth Wood Cres, TorontoC437439722 Kenneth Wood Cres, Toronto 28 Avenue Rd, Richmond HillN437390228 Avenue Rd, Richmond Hill 78 Elm Grove Ave, Richmond HillN437301278 Elm Grove Ave, Richmond Hill 5 Rossini Dr, Richmond HillN43767915 Rossini Dr, Richmond Hill 9 Fleetwell Crt, TorontoC43748319 Fleetwell Crt, Toronto 118 Royal West Dr, BramptonW4375714118 Royal West Dr, Brampton 1174 Welwyn Dr, MississaugaW43765611174 Welwyn Dr, Mississauga 61 Pellegrino Rd, BramptonW437574761 Pellegrino Rd, Brampton 58 Fresnel Rd, BramptonW437573758 Fresnel Rd, Brampton 3256 Liptay Ave, OakvilleW43762483256 Liptay Ave, Oakville 286 Bucanan Dr Lot 8, MarkhamN4374276286 Bucanan Dr Lot 8, Markham 17 Jackson St, VaughanN437587917 Jackson St, Vaughan 15 Hollybrook Cres, TorontoC437726215 Hollybrook Cres, Toronto 82 Charnwood Pl, MarkhamN437481382 Charnwood Pl, Markham 10 Marsnow Dr, MarkhamN437486910 Marsnow Dr, Markham 7321 Wellington Rd 30 Guelph, EramosaX43758607321 Wellington Rd 30 Guelph, Eramosa 5430 Oscar Peterson Blvd, MississaugaW43765635430 Oscar Peterson Blvd, Mississauga 48 Gordon Randle Dr, BramptonW437415648 Gordon Randle Dr, Brampton 3891 Vandorf Sdrd, Whitchurch StouffvilleN43766213891 Vandorf Sdrd, Whitchurch Stouffville 7 Woodgrove Tr, MarkhamN43773747 Woodgrove Tr, Markham 548 Wolsey Cres, OakvilleW4374913548 Wolsey Cres, Oakville 220 Moorland Cres, HamiltonX4375475220 Moorland Cres, Hamilton 48 Breckonwood Cres, MarkhamN437663948 Breckonwood Cres, Markham 233 Butternut Ridge Tr, AuroraN4373252233 Butternut Ridge Tr, Aurora 53 Adaskin Ave, VaughanN437610753 Adaskin Ave, Vaughan 34 Charing Cres, AuroraN437720234 Charing Cres, Aurora 28 Coakwell Dr, MarkhamN437413228 Coakwell Dr, Markham 71 Busch Ave, MarkhamN437737371 Busch Ave, Markham 22 Patriot Crt, MarkhamN437464522 Patriot Crt, Markham 17 Caproni Dr, VaughanN437287917 Caproni Dr, Vaughan 39 Starkweather St, AuroraN437625639 Starkweather St, Aurora 386 N Lauderdale Dr, VaughanN4376463386 N Lauderdale Dr, Vaughan 321 Peregrine Way, MiltonW4376332321 Peregrine Way, Milton 6383 Ormindale Way, MississaugaW43746186383 Ormindale Way, Mississauga 2245 Canonridge Circ, OakvilleW43754452245 Canonridge Circ, Oakville 12 Thornbay Dr, Whitchurch StouffvilleN437627912 Thornbay Dr, Whitchurch Stouffville 1413 W Bloor St, TorontoC43760501413 W Bloor St, Toronto 22 Templar St, BramptonW437716522 Templar St, Brampton 72 Red Deer Ave, TorontoE437451272 Red Deer Ave, Toronto 143 Milos Rd, Richmond HillN4375396143 Milos Rd, Richmond Hill 2110 Duncan Rd, OakvilleW43727962110 Duncan Rd, Oakville 4338 W Bloor St, TorontoW43749324338 W Bloor St, Toronto 129 Majestic Dr, MarkhamN4373822129 Majestic Dr, Markham 98 Winona Dr, TorontoC437552498 Winona Dr, Toronto 9 Heathfield St, WhitbyE43732789 Heathfield St, Whitby 2119 Dunedin Rd, OakvilleW43748942119 Dunedin Rd, Oakville 194 Coons Rd, Richmond HillN4374259194 Coons Rd, Richmond Hill 12 Galsworthy Dr, MarkhamN437699212 Galsworthy Dr, Markham 233 W Highland Rd, HamiltonX4375060233 W Highland Rd, Hamilton 27 Coakwell Dr, MarkhamN437342827 Coakwell Dr, Markham 91 David Willson Tr, East GwillimburyN437646191 David Willson Tr, East Gwillimbury 2174 Rebecca St, OakvilleW43757192174 Rebecca St, Oakville 9 Topham Cres, Richmond HillN43744549 Topham Cres, Richmond Hill 724 Dillman Ave, NewmarketN4376319724 Dillman Ave, Newmarket Lot 65 Hawtrey Rd, BramptonW4375293Lot 65 Hawtrey Rd, Brampton 66 Highgate Dr, MarkhamN437680866 Highgate Dr, Markham 1602 Islington Ave, TorontoW43752711602 Islington Ave, Toronto 173 Tavistock Rd, TorontoW4373122173 Tavistock Rd, Toronto 920 Ernest Cousins Circ, NewmarketN4376108920 Ernest Cousins Circ, Newmarket 25 Ridge Rd, UxbridgeN437545525 Ridge Rd, Uxbridge 40 Wyndham St, TorontoC437589840 Wyndham St, Toronto 780 Golden Farmer Way, MississaugaW4377204780 Golden Farmer Way, Mississauga 3269 Paul Henderson Dr, MississaugaW43773643269 Paul Henderson Dr, Mississauga 1642 Gallant Dr, MississaugaW43751471642 Gallant Dr, Mississauga 35 Autumn Olive Way, BramptonW436934735 Autumn Olive Way, Brampton 37 Newington Cres, BramptonW437288737 Newington Cres, Brampton 33 Tufton Cres, TorontoC437536833 Tufton Cres, Toronto 33 Merlin Dr, BramptonW437724333 Merlin Dr, Brampton 533 Kingston Rd, TorontoE4376218533 Kingston Rd, Toronto 720 Hurondale Dr, MississaugaW4376740720 Hurondale Dr, Mississauga 3 Deer Pass Rd, East GwillimburyN43751843 Deer Pass Rd, East Gwillimbury 151 Norseman St, TorontoW4376075151 Norseman St, Toronto 18 Prunella Cres, East GwillimburyN437414218 Prunella Cres, East Gwillimbury 42 Beatty Cres, AuroraN437436442 Beatty Cres, Aurora 454 Canterbury Cres, OakvilleW4373477454 Canterbury Cres, Oakville 328 John Cramp Path, OakvilleW4376387328 John Cramp Path, Oakville 82 Government Rd, TorontoW437285482 Government Rd, Toronto 23 Wagon Wheel Cres, Richmond HillN437502823 Wagon Wheel Cres, Richmond Hill 202 Mcallister Rd, TorontoC4375246202 Mcallister Rd, Toronto 745 Kingsmere Ave, NewmarketN4374888745 Kingsmere Ave, Newmarket 133 Ramblewood Lane, VaughanN4377369133 Ramblewood Lane, Vaughan 64 Innisbrook Cres, MarkhamN437428864 Innisbrook Cres, Markham 503 Wilson Heights Blvd, TorontoC4374051503 Wilson Heights Blvd, Toronto 81 Conistan Rd, MarkhamN437699581 Conistan Rd, Markham 26 Shirley Dr, Richmond HillN437391526 Shirley Dr, Richmond Hill 3164 Larry Cres, OakvilleW43773803164 Larry Cres, Oakville 72 Catalina Cres, Richmond HillN437622372 Catalina Cres, Richmond Hill 7 Laurentide Cres, BramptonW43761907 Laurentide Cres, Brampton 24 Timbertrail Cres, AuroraN437684224 Timbertrail Cres, Aurora 117 Memorial Park Ave, TorontoE4375234117 Memorial Park Ave, Toronto 105 Warden Ave, TorontoE4376956105 Warden Ave, Toronto 25 Kingsville Lane, Richmond HillN437573125 Kingsville Lane, Richmond Hill 22 Biltmore Crt, MarkhamN437721122 Biltmore Crt, Markham 11 Vince Ave, TorontoE437579711 Vince Ave, Toronto 4629 Harbottle Rd, BurlingtonW43770394629 Harbottle Rd, Burlington 107 Patton St, KingN4377030107 Patton St, King 10 Marshall Blvd, TorontoW437427710 Marshall Blvd, Toronto 70 Home Rd, TorontoW437650470 Home Rd, Toronto 21 Pennine Dr, WhitbyE437716321 Pennine Dr, Whitby 75 Gannett Dr, Richmond HillN437607775 Gannett Dr, Richmond Hill 6530 Tripoli Terr, MississaugaW43760266530 Tripoli Terr, Mississauga 1407 Lansdowne Ave, TorontoW43738811407 Lansdowne Ave, Toronto 155 Stark Cres, VaughanN4375083155 Stark Cres, Vaughan 2580 Edenhurst Dr, MississaugaW43755192580 Edenhurst Dr, Mississauga 217 Humberland Dr, Richmond HillN4375907217 Humberland Dr, Richmond Hill 15 Summerside St, MarkhamN437375315 Summerside St, Markham 1192 Stuffles Cres, NewmarketN43748791192 Stuffles Cres, Newmarket 38 Mansard Dr, Richmond HillN437690538 Mansard Dr, Richmond Hill 81 Mayvern Cres, Richmond HillN437547781 Mayvern Cres, Richmond Hill 254 Mcroberts Ave, TorontoW4375296254 Mcroberts Ave, Toronto 23 Cirillo St, BramptonW437567123 Cirillo St, Brampton 85 Lovers Lane, HamiltonX437639585 Lovers Lane, Hamilton 1575 Earl Cres, MiltonW43762881575 Earl Cres, Milton 119 Harding Blvd, TorontoE4374554119 Harding Blvd, Toronto 15135 Danby Rd, Halton HillsW437489615135 Danby Rd, Halton Hills 208 Devonsleigh Blvd, Richmond HillN4375195208 Devonsleigh Blvd, Richmond Hill 53 Helston Cres, WhitbyE437395653 Helston Cres, Whitby 8 Duncan Rd, MarkhamN43749678 Duncan Rd, Markham 7 Caronridge Cres, TorontoE43729367 Caronridge Cres, Toronto 707 Milverton Blvd, TorontoE4375109707 Milverton Blvd, Toronto 966 S Southfork Dr, MississaugaW4376894966 S Southfork Dr, Mississauga 40 Eastlea Cres, TorontoE437592740 Eastlea Cres, Toronto 5 Bayfield Crt, CaledonW43747425 Bayfield Crt, Caledon 65 Cobriza Cres, BramptonW437682865 Cobriza Cres, Brampton 5184 E Brookwood Crt, MississaugaW43766045184 E Brookwood Crt, Mississauga 63 Joseph St, UxbridgeN437622763 Joseph St, Uxbridge 270 Claremont St, TorontoC4376286270 Claremont St, Toronto 245 Conley St, VaughanN4376117245 Conley St, Vaughan 5 Isaac Devins Blvd, TorontoW43739345 Isaac Devins Blvd, Toronto 17 Southview Dr, VaughanN437693717 Southview Dr, Vaughan 20 Lobo Mews, TorontoW437495920 Lobo Mews, Toronto 4138 Sugarbush Rd, MississaugaW43768204138 Sugarbush Rd, Mississauga 10 Newton Gate, MarkhamN437737810 Newton Gate, Markham 23 Cecil Nichols Ave, MarkhamN437481523 Cecil Nichols Ave, Markham 22 Alanadale Ave, MarkhamN437445322 Alanadale Ave, Markham 47 Lacey Dr, WhitbyE437599047 Lacey Dr, Whitby 100 Remembrance Rd, BramptonW4377128100 Remembrance Rd, Brampton 197 Kirk Dr, MarkhamN4372908197 Kirk Dr, Markham 1987 Davebrook Rd, MississaugaW43752551987 Davebrook Rd, Mississauga 26 Interlacken Dr, BramptonW437737026 Interlacken Dr, Brampton 52 Rangemore Rd, BramptonW437576252 Rangemore Rd, Brampton 108 Balfour Ave, TorontoE4373936108 Balfour Ave, Toronto 95 Riverview Dr, TorontoC437569795 Riverview Dr, Toronto 321 Glenayr Rd, TorontoC4373315321 Glenayr Rd, Toronto 12 Saintfield Ave, TorontoC437591212 Saintfield Ave, Toronto 208 Donnelly Dr, MississaugaW4376797208 Donnelly Dr, Mississauga 443 Dearbourne Ave, KingN4375059443 Dearbourne Ave, King 11 Honeywell Pl, TorontoC437327311 Honeywell Pl, Toronto 2060 Dickson Rd, MississaugaW43767732060 Dickson Rd, Mississauga 251 Chaplin Cres, TorontoC4374529251 Chaplin Cres, Toronto 194 Burbank Dr, TorontoC4374521194 Burbank Dr, Toronto 122 Yorkminster Rd, TorontoC4374410122 Yorkminster Rd, Toronto 7 Sulgrave Cres, TorontoC43740737 Sulgrave Cres, Toronto 6 Toba Dr, TorontoC43765826 Toba Dr, Toronto 305 Colonel Wayling Blvd, East GwillimburyN4376920305 Colonel Wayling Blvd, East Gwillimbury 14 Cachet Pkwy, MarkhamN437374614 Cachet Pkwy, Markham 34 Princess Margaret Blvd, TorontoW437685934 Princess Margaret Blvd, Toronto 259 Dunview Ave, TorontoC4377005259 Dunview Ave, Toronto 382 Empress Ave, TorontoC4376863382 Empress Ave, Toronto 126 Babcombe Dr, MarkhamN4376776126 Babcombe Dr, Markham 377 Empress Ave, TorontoC4375926377 Empress Ave, Toronto 219 Bayview Fairways Dr, MarkhamN4376047219 Bayview Fairways Dr, Markham 152 Heintzman Cres, VaughanN4375555152 Heintzman Cres, Vaughan 4369 Lakeshore Rd, BurlingtonW43763714369 Lakeshore Rd, Burlington 3191 Highpoint Sdrd, CaledonW43743043191 Highpoint Sdrd, Caledon 15 Ryan Cres, MarkhamN437694615 Ryan Cres, Markham 207 Pemberton Ave, TorontoC4377294207 Pemberton Ave, Toronto 19 Irvington Cres, TorontoC437674519 Irvington Cres, Toronto 1026 Mississauga Heights Dr, MississaugaW43770361026 Mississauga Heights Dr, Mississauga 209 Glenforest Dr, VaughanN4375557209 Glenforest Dr, Vaughan 51 Shields Ave, TorontoC437674851 Shields Ave, Toronto 809 811 Duplex Ave, TorontoC4376345809 811 Duplex Ave, Toronto 1374 Stanbury Rd, OakvilleW43767801374 Stanbury Rd, Oakville 35 W Yongehurst Rd, Richmond HillN437396435 W Yongehurst Rd, Richmond Hill 2207 Nena Cres, OakvilleW43746232207 Nena Cres, Oakville 16 Leamington Ave, TorontoW437517116 Leamington Ave, Toronto 147 Lady Nadia Dr, VaughanN4374887147 Lady Nadia Dr, Vaughan 26 Diamondwood Dr, CaledonW437623326 Diamondwood Dr, Caledon 1426 N Clarkson Rd, MississaugaW43745021426 N Clarkson Rd, Mississauga 4628 Hewicks Lane, MississaugaW43762634628 Hewicks Lane, Mississauga 93 Burncrest Dr, TorontoC437483393 Burncrest Dr, Toronto 1199 Royal York Rd, TorontoW43738941199 Royal York Rd, Toronto 68 Wrenwood Crt, MarkhamN437689968 Wrenwood Crt, Markham 178 Faust Ridge Rdge, VaughanN4375601178 Faust Ridge Rdge, Vaughan 119 Upper Canada Dr, TorontoC4376521119 Upper Canada Dr, Toronto 53 Palmerston Ave, TorontoC437732453 Palmerston Ave, Toronto 21 Doctor Reynar Rd, CaledonW437329721 Doctor Reynar Rd, Caledon 30 Corwin Cres, TorontoC437674630 Corwin Cres, Toronto 115 Anndale Dr, TorontoC4373182115 Anndale Dr, Toronto 1334 Avon Cres, OakvilleW43762081334 Avon Cres, Oakville 6 Restwell Cres, TorontoC43767986 Restwell Cres, Toronto 16 Windridge Dr, MarkhamN437387316 Windridge Dr, Markham 7 Aspy Crt, VaughanN43761217 Aspy Crt, Vaughan 3 Cudia Cres, TorontoE43767373 Cudia Cres, Toronto 103 Clarinda Dr, TorontoC4376243103 Clarinda Dr, Toronto 37 Don Valley Dr, TorontoE437470537 Don Valley Dr, Toronto 267 Timber Creek Blvd, VaughanN4374438267 Timber Creek Blvd, Vaughan 221 Chaplin Cres, TorontoC4374781221 Chaplin Cres, Toronto 24 Cranston Dr, CaledonW437570724 Cranston Dr, Caledon 2 Wainwright Ave, Richmond HillN43768162 Wainwright Ave, Richmond Hill 150 Old Humber Cres, VaughanN4375187150 Old Humber Cres, Vaughan 162 Oliver Pl, OakvilleW4375664162 Oliver Pl, Oakville 1526 Kenmuir Ave, MississaugaW43771841526 Kenmuir Ave, Mississauga 5360 Creditview Rd, MississaugaW43764535360 Creditview Rd, Mississauga 3 Fifth St, TorontoW43760233 Fifth St, Toronto 4370 Wellsborough Pl, MississaugaW43738704370 Wellsborough Pl, Mississauga 25 Ballard Dr, KingN437475125 Ballard Dr, King 282 Ridge Rd, AuroraN4376733282 Ridge Rd, Aurora 2251 W Fifth Line, MississaugaW43763502251 W Fifth Line, Mississauga 1289 Warwick Ave, OakvilleW43761961289 Warwick Ave, Oakville 18 Banstock Dr, TorontoC437643318 Banstock Dr, Toronto 35 Eastglen Cres, TorontoW437507935 Eastglen Cres, Toronto 1289 Heritage Way, OakvilleW43773621289 Heritage Way, Oakville 396 Cortleigh Blvd, TorontoC4375301396 Cortleigh Blvd, Toronto 4395 Castlemore Rd, BramptonW43764524395 Castlemore Rd, Brampton 31 Ranleigh Ave, TorontoC437409331 Ranleigh Ave, Toronto 31 Aspen Leaf Crt, AuroraN437586431 Aspen Leaf Crt, Aurora 54 Felcher Blvd, Whitchurch StouffvilleN437632754 Felcher Blvd, Whitchurch Stouffville 154 Shadow Falls Dr, Richmond HillN4376257154 Shadow Falls Dr, Richmond Hill 99 Abner Miles Dr, VaughanN437728099 Abner Miles Dr, Vaughan 253 S Church St, Richmond HillN4377094253 S Church St, Richmond Hill 322 Summeridge Dr, VaughanN4375666322 Summeridge Dr, Vaughan 480 Atlas Ave, TorontoC4374046480 Atlas Ave, Toronto 2108 Obeck Cres, MississaugaW43739452108 Obeck Cres, Mississauga 917 Palmerston Ave, TorontoC4375355917 Palmerston Ave, Toronto 2265 Lakeshore Rd 2, BurlingtonW43738392265 Lakeshore Rd 2, Burlington 3A Stuart Ave, TorontoC43761223A Stuart Ave, Toronto 14 Arrowstook Rd, TorontoC437434814 Arrowstook Rd, Toronto 358 Fairlawn Ave, TorontoC4374160358 Fairlawn Ave, Toronto 80 N Church St, Whitchurch StouffvilleN425986080 N Church St, Whitchurch Stouffville 18 Mahaffy Crt, KingN437550418 Mahaffy Crt, King 5 Woodington Crt, WhitbyE43747805 Woodington Crt, Whitby 15 Cobden St, TorontoC437651815 Cobden St, Toronto 11 Yates Ave, VaughanN437627511 Yates Ave, Vaughan 134 Beverley Glen Blvd, VaughanN4375326134 Beverley Glen Blvd, Vaughan 5 Earl Grey Crt, Richmond HillN43747465 Earl Grey Crt, Richmond Hill 189 Glenview Ave, TorontoC4376415189 Glenview Ave, Toronto 50 Keewaydin Dr, KingN437400150 Keewaydin Dr, King 1503 Durham St, OakvilleW43763691503 Durham St, Oakville 209 Bayview Heights Dr, TorontoC4375820209 Bayview Heights Dr, Toronto 19 Knox Ave, TorontoW437428619 Knox Ave, Toronto 129 Holst Ave, MarkhamN4375947129 Holst Ave, Markham 208 Mortimer Ave, TorontoE4374054208 Mortimer Ave, Toronto 141 Briarwood Rd, MarkhamN4375795141 Briarwood Rd, Markham 1 Hambly Ave, TorontoE43733731 Hambly Ave, Toronto 50 Dudley Ave, TorontoC437489550 Dudley Ave, Toronto 35 Whalen Crt, Richmond HillN437612835 Whalen Crt, Richmond Hill 16550 Mount Hope Rd, CaledonW437499616550 Mount Hope Rd, Caledon 685 Nashville Rd, VaughanN4377134685 Nashville Rd, Vaughan 4 Palomino Dr, HamiltonX43763844 Palomino Dr, Hamilton 35 Giordano Way, VaughanN437612035 Giordano Way, Vaughan 123 Regatta Ave, Richmond HillN4374369123 Regatta Ave, Richmond Hill 63 Government Rd, TorontoW437491463 Government Rd, Toronto 11 Kings Lynn Rd, TorontoW437494511 Kings Lynn Rd, Toronto 14650 Concession 6, UxbridgeN437290414650 Concession 6, Uxbridge 5 Alpaca Dr, Richmond HillN43772155 Alpaca Dr, Richmond Hill 50 Foxwood Rd, VaughanN437383450 Foxwood Rd, Vaughan 57 Raeview Dr, Whitchurch StouffvilleN437511457 Raeview Dr, Whitchurch Stouffville 2302 Stratus Dr, OakvilleW43764242302 Stratus Dr, Oakville 52 Philips Lake Crt, Richmond HillN437734452 Philips Lake Crt, Richmond Hill 28 Little Hannah Lane, VaughanN437341528 Little Hannah Lane, Vaughan 12 Scrivener Dr, AuroraN437531312 Scrivener Dr, Aurora 70 Balderson Dr, VaughanN437732770 Balderson Dr, Vaughan 34 Gesher Cres, VaughanN437391334 Gesher Cres, Vaughan 37 Shell Crt, Richmond HillN437416537 Shell Crt, Richmond Hill 138 Farmstead Rd, Richmond HillN4377320138 Farmstead Rd, Richmond Hill 6261 Regional Rd 57 Rd, ClaringtonE43757326261 Regional Rd 57 Rd, Clarington 127 Northcote Ave, TorontoC4373096127 Northcote Ave, Toronto 1 Thornhill Ravines Cres, VaughanN43766031 Thornhill Ravines Cres, Vaughan 32 Canning Crt, MarkhamN437659832 Canning Crt, Markham 8 Horner Crt, UxbridgeN43730228 Horner Crt, Uxbridge 185 Sherwood Pl, NewmarketN4376176185 Sherwood Pl, Newmarket 18 Pearson Ave, Richmond HillN437623718 Pearson Ave, Richmond Hill 30 Donna Crt, TorontoC437670530 Donna Crt, Toronto 1458 Queensbury Cres, OakvilleW43740471458 Queensbury Cres, Oakville 4 Creekview Ave, Richmond HillN43741714 Creekview Ave, Richmond Hill 41 Lund St, Richmond HillN437551341 Lund St, Richmond Hill 5294 E Lawrence Ave, TorontoE43741155294 E Lawrence Ave, Toronto 11 Eaton Ave, TorontoE437405011 Eaton Ave, Toronto 18 Kilpatrick Dr, TorontoE437675818 Kilpatrick Dr, Toronto 40 Mcnairn Ave, TorontoC437525640 Mcnairn Ave, Toronto 613 Via Romano Blvd, VaughanN4375443613 Via Romano Blvd, Vaughan 859 1 2 Bathurst St, TorontoC4373402859 1 2 Bathurst St, Toronto 521 Browns Line, TorontoW4376500521 Browns Line, Toronto 85 Threshing Mill Blvd, OakvilleW437450685 Threshing Mill Blvd, Oakville
GTA Listings March 8th 2019 first appeared on: GTA Real Estate Pros 154 Bathurst St, Toronto, ON, M5V 2R3 647-362-2000 https://goo.gl/Yj7G5g
source https://www.gtarealestatepros.ca/gta-listings-mar-8-2019/
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bookloversofbath · 7 years
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A Testimony of Her Times: Based on Penelope Hind’s Diaries and Correspondence 1787-1838 by Sarah Markham soon to be presented for sale on the special BookLovers of Bath web site!
Published: Salisbury: Michael Russell , 1990, Hardback in dust wrapper.
Signed by the author, with dedication, on the half-title page unverified and reflected as such in the lack of premium. Contains: Black & white photographs;
From the cover: Drawing on the family papers which were the source of her admirable John Loveday of Caversham, Sarah Markham now introduces the succeeding generation, a portrait based on the diaries and correspondence of one of John Lovedays daughters, Penelope Hind. It is full of quiet domestic detail: Penelope spent several years of widowhood near Hungerford before becoming, in 1808, the wife of the vicar of Findon in Sussex. Most interesting and a rarity in such contemporary accounts is the closely observed relationship between the diarist and the children of servants and villagers (a relationship that Professor Antony Cox analyses in a postscript). There is new information on Penelopes friendship with the statesman William Windham, and she also records, through cuttings and correspondence from friends and relations, news from the wider world -there are some excellent vignettes of court life and, in particular, an enjoyably robust account of meeting Lord Byron. The eyewitness experience of the agricultural riots of the 18305, recounted in detail, tempers nostalgia for the country idyll. The incidence of mishap and bereavement reminds us, too, that illness in those days took an immeasurably harsher toll. Sarah Markham has marshalled her material skilfully and her supporting research is, as ever, impeccable. Her book is fairly titled A Testimony of Her Times, because that, without the distortions of great position or extremes of fortunate or adverse circumstance, is exactly what it is.
Very Good in Good Dust Wrapper. Dust wrapper sunned at the spine and onto the margins of both panels and now sealed in mylar. Text complete, clean and tight.
Grey boards with Gilt titling to the Spine. [X] 245 pages. Index. 9½” x 6¼”.
Of course, if you don’t like this one, may I woo you with the cream of the crop in my Biography catalogue?
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A Testimony of Her Times: Based on Penelope Hind’s Diaries and Correspondence 1787-1838 by Sarah Markham A Testimony of Her Times: Based on Penelope Hind's Diaries and Correspondence 1787-1838 by Sarah Markham soon to be presented for sale on the…
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