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| Tags: winawer |
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#21
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"help bot" wrote in message oups.com... Chess One wrote: Got to run. There's a Gilbert & Sullivan play I don't want to miss. I just bought some skirts and other prettly lil things I don't know the name of [pinafores?] to dress up my chess pieces. All they need now is a couple of navy bonnets. As for Spanish, I'll ask Raquel at the chess club tonight. Cordially, HMS Innes I watched an episode (or was it a movie?) of Star Trek, the next generation, in which Captain Jean Luke Picard outsmarted/confounded Data What? These must be the baby-trekkies. I am old enough to think of Kirk, 'Big-Ears' and Scottie. "I canna fianchetto faster, Captain!" by getting him to sing along to a Gilbert & Sullivan tune to distract him for a a few seconds. The tune wasn't particulalrly good, so I expect the real point of this was to demonstrate that Captain Picard was well educated, as in he went to the proper schools. I noted an aire of smugness in the tone taken by Mr. Parr when he declared that G & S plays are still performed at better schools (i.e. like the ones he attended). And me too! 6 bloody years of it! And its all very well, but really just Victoriana fantasy about what real lives people had, done in drag. I don't even think Victoria would have liked it much, and certainly Mr. Brown wouldn't. She was alternately a bit typsy in the park, and he too dour for such prancing 'roond'. Fortunately at college we encountered some properly depressing modern stuff, with Brecht and Pinter, along with black stages and dialogue. Personally, I am not familiar with these plays, nor with operas, nor any of the other halmarks of the rich and famous. But I am familiar with a story about an Emperor and his new clothes, which I think puts things into sharper perspective here. :D Swami Kennedy can't help himself from speculating on others - always negatively of course. One of these days he's going to discover what his balls are for, and they ain't for suggesting in new groups coy little deprecating fantasies about other people's lives who get out more. One good thing about Pirates of Penzance is that I lived in the same place and could engage in some real smuggling or 'free-trading' as we called it - since there were never any pirates in a customs port! ROFL Just up the coast was Falmouth where there still exists a massive chimney used for burning contraband tobacco, on which the whole town got high. These real places and the lives of their people did not intersect with the London light-opera circuit of romatic vistas. PI -- help bot |
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