Tag Archive for time

Bob Fosse’s ‘Cabaret’ restored to original glory

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? It took a stray bit of dirt to scratch the perfection of “Cabaret,” and painstaking effort to return it to cinematic glory.

The restored “Cabaret,” minus damage that had prevented a high-definition version, earned the opening spot at the four-day TCM Classic Film Festival. Stars Liza Minnelli and Joel Grey were scheduled to attend Thursday’s ceremony marking the musical’s 40th anniversary.

Minnelli, whose turn as cabaret singer Sally Bowles captured a best actress Academy Award and cemented her young stardom, said making “Cabaret” was a joyful “secret,” filmed in Munich and far away from meddling Los Angeles studio bosses.

Director Bob Fosse “got away with murder. We all did,” Minnelli said in a recent phone call from New York. She’s on a concert tour, “Confessions,” based on her album of the same title.

“We’d take chances, and the studio would send notes like, ‘Too cloudy. It will break up on drive-in (screens),’” she recalled. “Fosse would read that out loud, tear it up and throw it over his shoulder ? in front of the whole cast and crew.”

Set in 1930s Berlin, with German life darkening under the Nazi Party’s rise, the film was based on the 1966 Broadway musical adapted from Christopher Isherwood’s short novels.

Michael York starred as Sally’s boyfriend and Helmut Griem played the wealthy lover shared by both in a then-rare movie depiction of bisexuality. Fosse’s distinctive, archly suggestive choreography defined the film’s candor and cynicism.

Grey portrayed the grotesquely painted master of ceremonies at the nightclub where Sally performed. Her vulnerability and yearning were on display in the tawdry setting as she belted out “Maybe This Time,” ”Life Is a Cabaret” and other indelible songs from the John Kander-Fred Ebb score.

Both Grey and Minnelli won Oscars, his for supporting actor. Besides capturing a total of eight trophies, including best director for Fosse, the 1972 film was nominated for best picture.

“Cabaret” has been sold on standard-definition DVD from Warner Bros. since 1992. But it was unavailable in high-def or for digital presentation because of a vertical scratch that ran through 1,000 feet, or 10 minutes, of one of its reels, said Ned Price, vice president of mastering and restoration for Warner Bros.

The damage apparently was caused by a piece of dirt that had rolled through the length of the reel, starting with a scene in which York’s character has a confrontation with a pro-Nazi boarding house resident, and cut into the emulsion.

With the damaged images digitally “painted out” using bits from surrounding areas, “the difficult part was matching the grain structure so the fix was invisible,” Price said in an email.

Repair attempts using automated digital processing failed, so all 1.4 million frames of the damaged reel were painted by an operator using a computer stylus. The restored version is expected to play on TCM later this year.

For Minnelli, 66, “Cabaret” holds a certain family irony: It reversed an approach to movie musicals she said was pioneered by her late father, famed director Vincente Minnelli, in a 1944 film starring her mother, Judy Garland. The actress-singer and Vincente Minnelli were married from 1945-51. Garland, 47, died in 1969.

“My father changed everything when he did ‘Meet Me in St. Louis,’” Minnelli said. “That was the first time a musical had taken the songs outside of the theater, and people sang at home and on the street.”

“‘Cabaret,’” she said, “changed it back,” with Fosse staging nearly all the musical numbers in the nightclub setting. An exception: “Tomorrow Belongs to Me,” sung by a handsome, innocent-faced teenage boy, who as the camera pulls back, is chillingly revealed to be garbed in a Nazi uniform.

“Every time I see it, I just keep marveling at Bob Fosse’s work, and his choices,” Minnelli said of the film

Her dad had a role in how she approached her character’s style, the actress said. When she sought inspiration from the sleekly elegant look of Marlene Dietrich, who was famous in the 1930s (and beyond), Vincente Minnelli protested.

“My father said, ‘No, no, no,’ and he showed me pictures of (actresses) Louise Brooks and Theda Bara. He said they were marvelous brunettes,” she recalled. The result: Sally’s heavily lined, thickly lashed eyes, defined lips and a sleek cap of black hair with an impish ? devilish? ? point extending down her forehead.

Two days before shooting began, she put the look together for Fosse’s benefit.

“I knocked on his door and said, ‘What do you think?’” Minnelli recalled. He gave a surprised stammer, she said, followed quickly by, “It’s good!”

How does Minnelli, one of the few artists to win an Oscar, a Tony (at age 19, for “The Sterile Cuckoo”), an Emmy and a Grammy, feel about being so closely identified with “Cabaret”?

“Honey, to tell you the truth, anything anybody says is fine,” she said, adding a husky, hearty laugh.

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TCM is part of Time Warner’s Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.

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Online:

http://www.tcm.com

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Through The Looking Glass ? What To Do When You Are Plus Size

If you?re anything like the Red Queen from, ?Alice in Wonderland?, you might be sporting a few extra pounds. I have been for some time now. One of the down sides of having that extra weight is finding something nice to wear for special occasions. The Queen might be able to get away with wearing the same thing every time she leaves the castle for a night on the town, but we can?t.

Let?s face it, we need to make use of the good we have, and perhaps draw attention away from those trouble areas. (We won?t point hers out to her either ? or she might have our heads!) Having said that, just because I?ve got a few extra pounds, or in the vernacular of today?s media, being plus size, doesn?t mean I don?t want to look my best. It doesn?t mean that there aren?t occasions in my life that I need to dress up for. With some work, I can find clothes for the everyday and still look pretty good. At least I like to think I look pretty good. In the end, that?s what matters anyway, what I think not what anyone else says.

What I do have trouble with is finding that special plus size cocktail party dress. Whether it is for a wedding, a night on the town with the girls, or the guys, or a special holiday or event, I want to look nice, and it isn?t always easy ? just ask the Queen.

With that in mind, I talked to a few other gals in my situation to see what they do when they want to up the wow factor. The first thing I realized is this is a common problem. It?s nice sometimes to know you?re not alone with an issue. Trust me, you?re not alone. I?m afraid that in today?s world, too many designers assume if someone is plus size, they have no desire or need to look good. I?ve never understood why someone else should be allowed to decide what you or I should or shouldn?t want or do.

Thumbing our collective noses at the designers and the media, the end result of my interactions with other plus size gals was that it all comes down to doing what makes you feel good about yourself. The lesson learned, dress for you and the world be damned.

Let?s show the world just how we can shine and if they don?t like it ? then, off with their heads!

I am an online business person and writer.
http://www.plussizedcocktaildress.com/

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Countries consider time out on the ‘leap second’

In this picture taken Monday Jan. 16, 2012, the headquarters of the International Telecommunication Union are photographed , in Geneva. ITU’s member states are meeting in Switzerland this week to consider abolishing the leap second. The U.N. telecoms agency says countries are poised to decide this week whether to drop the 40-year practice of adding leap seconds to keep atomic clocks in sync with the Earth day. The International Telecommunication Union says a U.S.-backed proposal would allow atomic clocks to run unadjusted for the planet’s irregular rotation. Vincent Meens, an ITU official who has chaired technical talks on the issue, says approving the plan would let operators of cellphone networks, financial markets and air traffic control systems rely on the near-absolute precision offered by atomic clocks without having to worry about the impact of adding leap seconds every year or two. ? The plan is opposed by some astronomers, as well as countries such as Britain, Canada and China. (AP Photo/Frank Jordans)

In this picture taken Monday Jan. 16, 2012, the headquarters of the International Telecommunication Union are photographed , in Geneva. ITU’s member states are meeting in Switzerland this week to consider abolishing the leap second. The U.N. telecoms agency says countries are poised to decide this week whether to drop the 40-year practice of adding leap seconds to keep atomic clocks in sync with the Earth day. The International Telecommunication Union says a U.S.-backed proposal would allow atomic clocks to run unadjusted for the planet’s irregular rotation. Vincent Meens, an ITU official who has chaired technical talks on the issue, says approving the plan would let operators of cellphone networks, financial markets and air traffic control systems rely on the near-absolute precision offered by atomic clocks without having to worry about the impact of adding leap seconds every year or two. ? The plan is opposed by some astronomers, as well as countries such as Britain, Canada and China. (AP Photo/Frank Jordans)

(AP) ? It’s high noon for the humble leap second.

After ten years of talks, governments are headed for a showdown vote this week on an issue that pits technological precision against nature’s whims.

The United States, France and others are pushing for countries at a U.N. telecom meeting to abolish the leap second, which for 40 years has kept computers in sync with the Earth day.

Leap seconds are necessary to prevent atomic clocks from speeding ahead of solar time. They are added at irregular intervals, effectively stretching atomic time by a heartbeat to make up for the irregular wobble in the Earth’s rotation.

Critics warn that scrapping the leap second would break the last link between the passing of time and the course of the sun across the sky. But backers say machines shouldn’t any longer be tethered to the imprecise cycle of sunrise and sunset.

“This would be an important decision because the problem of introducing the leap second would disappear and we would have a more steady time than we have today,” Vincent Meens, an official at the International Telecommunication Union who has chaired technical talks on the issue, said Tuesday.

Operators of cell phone networks, financial markets and air traffic control systems could then rely on the near-absolute precision offered by atomic clocks without having to worry about stopping their systems for the length of a heartbeat every year or two.

“Most of the people who operate time services favor discontinuing leap seconds,” said Judah Levine, a physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado.

“The main problem is that the leap second is usually implemented by stopping the clock for one second. However, the world doesn’t stop,” he said.

Satellite navigation systems like GPS don’t use leap seconds, which adds confusion, said Levine. “In addition, the leap second occurs in the middle of the day in Asia and Australia, which is particularly inconvenient.”

In a world increasingly reliant on computers for mission-critical measurements, any glitch could be costly as well as fatal, said Elisa Felicitas Arias, director of the time department at the Paris-based International Bureau of Weights and Measures.

“You can make a dramatic error if, for example, you are trying to land an aircraft,” she said, noting that rocket launches, too, are never scheduled on days when a leap second might occur. “This is something we are trying to correct.”

Critics say the risks are overblown and leap seconds have been used successfully since 1972, despite being hard to predict more than six months in advance.

China has warned that any change could hurt astronomers, who need to be able to compare observations spanning thousands of years as part of their work.

Canada, too, has raised objections to the proposed plan, while Britain has warned that it could spell the end of Greenwich Mean Time, or GMT, as a meaningful measure.

“Leap seconds are an inconvenience to the telecommunications people, but there are many other users of time who should be considered,” said Ken Seidelmann, a research professor at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and former director of astrometry at the U.S. Naval Observatory.

Killing off the leap second would also result in atomic clocks slowly outrunning the solar day by a rate of about 90 seconds a century. After many thousands of years, atomic clocks would say it’s midday when outside the sun has yet to rise.

“This is replacing a small problem with a big problem further down the line,” said Daniel Gambis, an astronomer at the Paris Observatory and the man who alerted timekeepers around the world to the next leap second, due on June 30.

Arias said solutions could be found for such problems, but conceded that severing the link between the proposed new standard time ? as measured by atomic clocks ? and the solar time people are accustomed to might seem troubling to many.

Still, the time for change has come, she argued.

Unless a last minute consensus is reached, delegates at the ITU meeting in Geneva are expected to vote on the issue Thursday or Friday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-01-17-EU-UN-Leap-Second/id-02470a3e7a8541b0a321b2daf990e1da

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Joel McHale Trivia (omg!)

Joel McHale is known by most as the host of “The Soup” and the star of “Community,” but this week McHale hits the big screen in “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D.” How much do you really know about this cable TV host turned actor? Test your knowledge of Joel McHale by taking this quiz below.

Trivia Questions:

1. Where was Joel McHale born?

2. How many childhood injuries did McHale sustain?

3. What sport did McHale play in college?

4. What was McHale’s first TV job?

5. What was McHale’s first feature film role?

6. Name four actors, who preceded McHale as host of “Talk Soup/The Soup” and went on to big careers in entertainment.

7. McHale had a medical scare with his first son Eddie when he was an infant. What happened?

8. How does McHale spend his spare time?

9. How many seasons of “Community” has McHale appeared in?

10. What part does McHale play in the news movie “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D”?

Trivia Answers:

1. McHale was born in Rome, Italy to Jack and Laurie McHale. They relocated the family to Seattle, Washington, which is where the actor spent most of his youth.

2. McHale has had five concussions including falling off a ladder in preschool and fracturing his skull at age 15.

3. McHale attended the University of Washington and played football for the Huskies. He was a tight-end and joined the team just in time to play in the 1991 NCAA championship.

4. While still in college McHale had an internship at the local NBC affiliate, KING-TV, where he appeared on their sketch-comedy show “Almost Live!”

5. McHale was cast as a bank executive in the 2004 Sam Raimi film “Spider-Man 2″ starring Tobey Maguire.

6. Greg Kinnear, John Henson, Hal Sparks and Aisha Tyler were all hosts of “Talk Soup” before McHale began working on “The Soup.”

7. When McHale’s son Eddie was a newborn he needed open heart surgery to repair two holes in the wall of his heart. He recovered fully and suffers no lasting effects from the condition or the operation.

8. McHale told Parade magazine that he spends his Sundays grilling – anything from flank steak to tri-tips to salmon. He said, “I like roasting vegetables. I barbecue some pretty mean asparagus.”

9. McHale has starred in the first two seasons of “Community.” He will be back for a third time when the series returns on September 22, 2011.

10. McHale plays a spy-hunting reporter named Wilbur Wilson in “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D.” He is married to Jessica Alba’s character Marissa, mom to the new spy kids played by Mason Cook and Rowan Blanchard.

More From This Contributor:

Jason Bateman Trivia

Roseanne Barr Trivia

Noah Wyle Trivia

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Sensible Nursing Faculty ? Many Articles

There are loads of single mothers (and a few dads too) that do not get the credit they deserve. We can say that we admire what they do, and that we understand, but I do not assume anyone can understand unless they are truly a single parent. There are occasions after I feel like one, however I do have the assist of my husband, though he?s not around as much as I would like. My mother was a single mother for a few years, and now that I look back at all she did, I am actually in awe of how well she handled it. She worked full time, put herself though practical nursing school, and my brother and I at all times felt content material and loved.

I know that she choose sensible nursing school as a result of it only took one 12 months to complete, and she or he wanted to be earning more money as shortly as she could. She knew that she could later return to school to develop into a Registered nurse, however at that time limit, she simply wanted to be able to help us with a job that she would care about. She did rather well within the school, and was soon working the night time shift. Although we often had to sleep someplace else at evening, we felt completely happy and secure. You?ll be able to?t ask for far more than that.

My aunt saw what my mom was doing, and she or he decided to go through practical nursing faculty as well. She was not a single mom, but she was in search of something to do with her time. Her kids have been school age, and he or she was not completely happy sitting at home. She went by way of practical nursing faculty, received a job, and then went back to grow to be a Registered nurse. She now works in labor and delivery, and is sort of happy with her choices. My mother now not works due to again harm, however she is happy together with her option to turn into a nurse.

If you are looking for a terrific career, you would possibly need to take into account sensible nursing school. I?ll say that nursing is not for everyone though. I tried to work as a nurse?s support for some time, and I simply couldn?t handle it. It wasn?t the dirty work of the job that bothered me, but rather the suffering I saw. I do know that I may have helped with that suffering, but after I would go dwelling I?d cry for hours. After weeks of this, I needed to quit. I used to be changing into depressed. My mom had hoped that I?d adore it, and would go to sensible nursing college as she did, but it simply wasn?t in the cards.

In case you itch for extra data in regard to chiropractic denver swing by the Writer?s website without delay.pay a visit to the Author?s internet site at once.

Source: http://manyarticles.cz.cc/sensible-nursing-faculty/

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Tips on Adapting Favorite Recipes to The Microwave | Food and Drink

Cheese Stuffed Cannelloni Tips on Adapting Favorite Recipes to The Microwave

To adapt a favorite recipe to the microwave, first consider its suitability to microwave cooking. Since microwave cooking is a ?moist cooking method,? conventional recipes that are steamed, poached or cooked in liquid or a sauce are easiest to adapt ? often with little change except reducing the cooking time and amount of liquid.

Stove-top recipes adapt better to microwaving than those baked in the conventional oven. Foods with a crisp, dry or flaky crust, such as Yorkshire puddings, souffles, yeast breads, puff pastry or double- crust pies, pancakes, chiffon or angel food cakes are not suited to the microwave. Deep-frying, canning or broiling should also be done conventionally.

For casseroles and mixtures, here are some tips to adapt your favorite recipe:

Reduce liquid
* Reduce liquid to about 3/4 of the amount called for in conventional recipe. Liquids do not evaporate in the moist cooking of the microwave as they do in the dry heat of a conventional oven. You can always add more liquid during cooking for desired consistency.

Fat and seasonings
* Cut the fat. Small amounts of butter or oil can be used for flavoring, but are not needed to prevent sticking. Too much fat attracts microwave energy and can affect cooking time. Use a minimum of salt and reduce seasonings slightly when first adapting a recipe. Flavors are often intensified with the smaller amount of liquid and shorter cooking times. Adjust seasoning after cooking.

Cooking techniques
* Use microwave cooking techniques such as covering, stirring, turning or rotating during cooking to help foods cook evenly. If a casserole cannot be stirred or cooked in a round dish, lasagna for example, use a lower power level and rotate dish occasionally. Use microwave cookware large enough when cooking foods with lots of liquid, such as sauce, rice dishes or soups, as rapid boiling and boil-overs are common.

Power levels
* Tender, moist food (vegetables, fruit, fish, poultry, ground meat, beverages, soups, most sauces and appetizers, bacon, stirrable casseroles and puddings) are usually microwaved on high (100 per cent). Medium-high (70 per cent) is preferable for casseroles, pasta dishes, meatloaves and some reheating. Recipes with delicate ingredients that tend to toughen at too high a temperature, such as eggs or cheese are best cooked on medium (50 per cent) or medium- low (30 per cent). Quiches, cheesecakes, baked custards and egg- thickened sauces (Hollandaise), roasting meat and defrosting are some examples.

Time
* Time is the key in microwave cooking. The temperature of the food, quantity, size and shape and type of food, and wattage of your microwave oven all affect the cooking time. Always under cook and check. You can always add more time, but you can?t take it away. Start with 1/4 to 1/3 of the conventional cooking time. For most foods, tests for doneness are similar to conventional tests. Remember to let food stand after cooking to complete the cooking process. If a dish is still not done to your liking after standing time (five to 15 minutes), return to the microwave for further cooking.

Cheese-Stuffed Cannelloni with Mushroom Sauce

Sauces and pasta dishes cook well in the microwave and this creamy pasta dish is no exception. This time-saving version uses purchased egg roll wrappers ? no need to precook pasta.

1 cup ricotta cheese
1 1/2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 egg, lightly beaten
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
1/2 cup each dried basil and oregano
salt and pepper
8 egg rolls wrappers

Sauce:
1 tbsp butter
1 onion, chopped
1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
10 oz (284 mL) can chicken broth, undiluted
pinch pepper
grated Parmesan cheese, optional

Combine cheeses, egg, parsley, basil, oregano, pinch each salt and pepper. Spoon 1/8 cheese filling along one edge of an egg roll wrapper, roll up to enclose filling. Arrange seam side down in a single layer in a shallow 12 x 8 inch microwavable dish.

To make sauce, combine butter, onion and mushrooms in 4-cup glass measure or medium microwavable bowl. Microwave, uncovered at high (100 per cent) 2 to 4 minutes until softened. Blend in flour and microwave at high 20 seconds. Gradually whisk in broth until smooth. Microwave, uncovered at high 4 to 6 minutes or until mixture comes to a boil and thickens. Whisk once or twice during cooking. Season to taste with pepper.

Pour sauce over pasta, cover with waxed or parchment paper and microwave at medium-high (70 per cent) 10 to 14 minutes or until heated throughout. Rotate dish, as necessary, during cooking. Sprinkle with additional Parmesan cheese, if desired and let stand, covered for five to 10 minutes before serving. Making 3 to 4 servings.

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Source: http://thepmonggon.com/tips-adapting-favorite-recipes-microwave/

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