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#Amy Goodwin
freaven · 6 months
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Y'all are surprised so many actors, singers, writers, models, politicians, etc, are Zionists and I'm surprised y'all are surprised, you thought rich people were going to side with oppressed and not oppressors ?
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simspaghetti · 10 months
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Night out on the town! 🕺✨
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trulyatessfan · 11 months
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This is my contest entry for @anxietyfluffy ‘s contest! :D One of the Karen’s design is from @lackadaisiluz ‘s AU so it’s his design!!
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badmovieihave · 10 days
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Bad movie I have Star Trek Picard :The Final Season 2023
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eemcintyre · 1 month
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Me and this chart is the equivalent of the man with the string board meme
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An exhaustive-as-I-could-make-it chart of the actresses I think look alike and how they are all c o n n e c t e d do you see my vision
In order from left to right, from the top row down:
Jeanne Damas
Michelle Trachtenberg
Anna Karina
Cate Blanchett
Julianna Margulies
Nancy Kerrigan
Nicole Kidman
Kim Novak
Virna Lisi
Brittany Snow
Dakota Johnson
Penelope Cruz
Anne Hathaway
Connie Sellecca
Isabella Rossellini
Helen Schneider
Grace Kelly
Diane Kruger
Alison Doody
Sarah Wynter
Sophia Myles
Kate Winslet
Victoria Pedretti
Liv Tyler
Michelle Monaghan
Rebecca Ferguson
Ingrid Bergman
Nastassja Kinski
Helen Mirren
Jennifer Lawrence
Hayley Mills
Diane Lane
Julia Stiles
Kat Dennings
Mary Page Keller
Laura Prepon
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Elisabeth Shue
Maggie Lawson
Alicia Silverstone
Madchen Amick
Phoebe Tonkin
Dagmara Dominczyk
Megan Fox
Ana de Armas
Olivia Munn
Rachel Leigh Cook
Katie Holmes
Sarah Clarke
Jennifer Morrison
Charlize Theron
Melora Hardin
Ashley Judd
Katherine Heigl
Jeanne Tripplehorn
Kelly McGillis
Alanis Morissette
Michelle Borth
Sasha Alexander
Marion Cotillard
Rose Byrne
Natalie Portman
Keira Knightley
Sadie Robertson
Sharon Tate
Sheryl Lee
Amanda Logan
Stephanie Beatriz
Amy Winehouse
Maggie Wheeler
Zooey Deschanel
Katy Perry
Salma Hayek
Queen Letizia of Spain
Kate Middleton
Hilarie Burton
Stephanie J. Block
Olivia Wilde
Courteney Cox
Demi Moore
Jennifer Connelly
Sarah Vickers
Sarah Topham
Pamela Sue Martin
Reiko Aylesworth
Megan Boone
Cobie Smulders
Andie MacDowell
Julia Roberts
Carla Gugino
Jennifer Garner
Rachel McAdams
Felicity Jones
Sherry Stringfield
Cybill Shepherd
Ellen Barkin
Cameron Diaz
Juliette Lewis
Cindy Williams
Ginnifer Goodwin
Sherilyn Fenn
Hedy Lamarr
Dita von Teese
Audrey Tautou
Jamie Alexander
Lauren Graham
Kelly Preston
Melissa Fumero
Sarah Greene
Christina Ricci
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mandoreviews · 1 year
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📽️ Win a Date with Tad Hamilton! (2004)
I LOVE Josh Duhamel! Seriously, give me a movie with Josh Duhamel and I will pretty much watch it without question. He was definitely the best part of this movie. I really enjoyed the whole thing, though. I enjoy movies where nothing bad actually happens to make the girl choose one guy over the other; she just realizes which one is better for her. All of the actors are good, even though the script is a little corny and the storyline is a little worn-out. I would watch this again.
Sex/nudity: 2/10 (some kissing and sexual references)
Language: 1/10 (mild)
Violence: 1/10 (threats but no actual violence)
Overall rating: 7/10
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aschenblumen · 2 years
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Amy Beach, Piano concerto in C sharp minor, op. 45. Paul Goodwin, director Joanne Polk, piano
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ommlette-du-plumbob · 2 years
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Amy was very very grateful that Goodwin stepped in when he did. Amy had froze in fear, but thanks to their presence she snapped back into action before she lost her kitchen.
However, he and Sinbad really know how to overstay their welcome. They got way too comfortable WAY too fast.
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moviesandmania · 2 years
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MANDY THE HAUNTED DOLL (2018) Reviews and free to watch on YouTube
MANDY THE HAUNTED DOLL (2018) Reviews and free to watch on YouTube
‘Don’t play with evil’ Mandy the Haunted Doll is a 2018 British horror film about three burglars who realise they are trapped in a house with a deadly cursed doll. The onscreen title is Mandy the Doll and the movie is also known as The Doll from the Attic and Haunted Dolls Directed by Jamie Weston (Fox Trap) from a screenplay written by Shannon Holiday (Curse of the Scarecrow; Bride of Scarecrow;…
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femmefatalevibe · 10 months
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Femme Fatale Booklist: Decentering Men, Feminist Dating, & Childfree Living
Books On Decentering Men/Feminist Perspectives On Dating (for the times you're in need, you know):
A Single Revolution by Shani Silver (most important rec, IMO!)
Patriarchy Stress Disorder: The Invisible Inner Barrier to Women's Happiness and Fulfillment by Valerie Rein, Ph.D
What a Time to Be Alone: The Slumflower's Guide to Why You Are Already Enough by Chidera Eggerue 
How To Get Over A Boy by Chidera Eggerue 
All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation by Rebecca Traister
Enjoy Your Solo By Mary Delia Allen
How to Be Single and Happy by Jennifer Taitz
Singled Out: How Singles Are Stereotyped, Stigmatized, and Ignored, and Still Live Happily Ever After by Bella DePaulo, Ph.D
On Our Best Behavior: The Seven Deadly Sins and the Price Women Pay to Be Good by Elise Loehnen 
We Are Not Born Submissive: How Patriarchy Shapes Women's Lives by Manon Garcia 
The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girls by Mona Eltahawy 
Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny by Kate Manne
Why Does He Do That?: Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling  Men by Lundy Bancroft 
Men Who Hate Women: From Incels to Pickup Artists: The Truth about Extreme Misogyny and How it Affects Us All by Laura Bates
Fed Up: Emotional Labor, Women, and the Way Forward by Gemma Hartley  
The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love by Bell Hooks
All About Love: New Visions by Bell Hooks
Books On Childfree Living:
Women Without Kids: The Revolutionary Rise of an Unsung Sisterhood by Ruby Warrington
Childfree by Choice: The Movement Redefining Family and Creating a New Age of Independence by Amy Blackstone
Confessions of a Childfree Woman: A Life Spent Swimming Against the Mainstream by Marcia Drut-Davis 
Regretting Motherhood: A Study by Orna Donath
No One Tells You This: A Memoir by Glynnis MacNicol 
25 Over 10: A Childfree Longitudinal Study by Laura Caroll
The Baby Matrix: Why Freeing Our Minds From Outmoded Thinking About Parenthood & Reproduction Will Create a Better World  by Laura Caroll
The Baby Trap by Ellen Peck
Policing the Womb: Invisible Women and the Criminalization of Motherhood by Michele Goodwin 
Without Children: The Long History of Not Being a Mother by Peggy O'Donnell Heffington 
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amybgood · 1 year
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glassprism · 2 months
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Hi! You may have answered this before, and if you have, I'm sorry for asking a question you have already asked.
Do you know the age range for Christine actresses? Like how old the oldest actress was when they played here. I know the youngest has been 18 and I know Kaley Ann Voorhees (I remember her specifically since she was the Christine when I saw it on Broadway) was one of those. (I'm excluding Emmy Rossum from this since I'm talking strictly stage show).
I'm curious because she's always been a dream role, but I think I might be reaching the age of being too old {25}. Even if I am, though, I'll be content with doing it in the privacy of my own home. Lol.
So first, I just kind of want to say that I'm really worried for the state of the industry if you and others start thinking that 25 is "too old" to play Christine. (This is what happens when you keep casting younger and younger, CamMack and co.!)
Now, as for your actual question: I think we should separate it into two related but still somewhat different categories: who are the youngest and oldest Christines ever (basically the minimum and maximum age ranges, good as little factoids of knowledge) and what is the general age range (probably more useful for someone actually looking to get the role).
To start with the first, a couple of corrections! The youngest Christines have actually been around 16-17 years old, and no, I'm not including Emmy Rossum in this: actresses like Katie Hall and Amy Nuttall were 16 when cast as understudies and 17 when they performed the role, while Kaja Mianowana, Paulina Janczak, and Marta Hadžimanov were 17 when cast as principals (though typically sharing the role with a somewhat older actress). Additionally, actresses like Olivia Safe, Sarah Bakker, Julie Goodwin, and Amy Hudson Holder, were 18 to 19 years old when cast as understudies or alternates. Kaley Ann Voorhees was actually 20 years old, not 18, when she was first cast in Phantom, making her comparatively older than some of the others on this list, though she was still the youngest actress to play Christine on Broadway.
Now as for the oldest, those would probably be Barbara Fonyo who was 50 when she ended her run, as well as Lisa Vroman, who was 47, and Jill Washington, who was 46, when they ended theirs.
However, the general age range of Christines, I'd say, is probably mid 20s to 30s, and you'll typically see that in casting calls where, if they specify an age range, will say something like "20-29" and what-not. I have said that it seems productions are casting younger, and honestly it seems like every new Christine is only in her 20s, but there have been several actresses cast in the show in their 30s even in the last decade or so: Valerie Link in Hamburg (34), Ali Ewoldt on Broadway (34), and Meghan Picerno in the World Tour and Broadway (maybe 34/35).
But ultimately, your actual age will matter less than what age you can play as (e.g. some people can play teenagers and young adults into their 30s and 40s) and, more importantly, your skills when it comes to singing, acting, and (to some extent) dancing. That should ultimately be the focus when trying to become Christine, not your age!
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simspaghetti · 7 months
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Do is officially an adult, and like Amy, he's also having a midlife crisis! 🫠
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deadpresidents · 3 months
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Who would you say are some exceptional female historians who've written about the US presidency?
There are scores of great female Presidential historians, so any quick list that I make will invariably leave deserving historians out and I apologize ahead of time. Before I begin the list, I want to give special recognition to one of the very best: Doris Kearns Goodwin's bibliography measures up against the books of any and all Presidential historians. Her first book, Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream: The Most Revealing Portrait of a President and Presidential Power Ever Written (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) was originally published in 1976 but, in my opinion, remains one of the greatest Presidential biographies EVER written.
Others, in no particular order: •Margaret Leech •Amy S. Greenberg •Elizabeth Drew •Brenda Wineapple •Candice Millard •Amity Shlaes •Jan Jarboe Russell •Annette Gordon-Reed •Alexis Coe •Lady Bird Johnson (her diaries are priceless first-person accounts of her husband's Presidency and life in the White House) •Joanne B. Freeman •Lynne Cheney (surprisingly to most people, the wife of former Vice President Dick Cheney is a respected historian who has written excellent books on James Madison and the early Presidents from Virginia) •Fawn Brodie •Aida D. Donald •Kate Andersen Brower •Elizabeth Brown Pryor •Peggy Noonan •Nancy Gibbs •Nancy Isenberg •Susan Swain •Margaret Truman •Edna Greene Medford
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trulyatessfan · 4 months
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Presentation of this clown... again
Hello everyone, I'm Atlas and after making a change of my username both here and on Instagram, might as well redo my presentation! Facts about me: - I am 23 years old! - I use they/them pronouns - I'm an artist, a video editor and a shitposter (when inspired) - I'm very inconsistent in art,,, - I'm a silly little clown teehee Facts about my art: - I prefer drawing women or feminine bodies in general - My goal is to be the first person (or one of the firsts) to draw every Criminal Case characters! - I want to try to do commissions this year! My favorite characters in Criminal Case - Tess Goodwin (the number 1 <3) - Morgan Goodwin - Erikah Mabayo - Freddie Alonzo - Duncan Young - Amy Young - Fiona Flanagan - Rosamund Wilcox - Abigail Riley - Virginia Watchbird - Peggy Pascal - Velma Bannister - Tyler Snakes - Fabrizio Gallardo - Lizzie Dion - Nebet
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fictionadventurer · 4 months
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Fortnight of Books: Day 1
Overall - best books read in 2023?
Of new-to-me books, the standouts of my year include (in rough chronological order of when I read them):
Endurance by Alfred Lansing: Thrilling and harrowing account of Shackleton's South Pole expedition. It made me very grateful as I went through my day-to-day life--no matter how bad things were, at least I had eaten things that weren't seal meat.
Daisy Miller and Washington Square by Henry James: Short, sad little novellas that drew me in with their compassionate realism and added a new name to my list of favorite classic authors.
A Field Guide to Mermaids by Emily B. Martin: Beautifully illustrated book that provides a detailed world of mermaid species and provides lots of interesting facts about the natural world. Child me would have loved this.
Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell: I hated the ending, and the structure was very weird, but this was a look at a side of Victorian London I rarely see in literature, with some great characters and a really interesting dive into the issues in the background of North and South.
Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin: It gave me an obsession with Lincoln's Cabinet. I still sometimes stop and think, "I need to read about some Seward shenanigans."
Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard: Extremely readable history book that provided a lot of food for my obsession with James Garfield's and Chester Arthur's presidencies.
The Q by Beth Brower: Victorian Ruritanian fiction about a female newspaper tycoon that has a murky plot but also one of my favorite romantic couples of the year, one of the best tributes to autumn I've read, and most importantly (the real reason it's on this list), introduced me to the author of my favorite series of the year (more below).
Desire and The Good Comrade by Una L. Silsberrad: Forgotten turn-of-the-century women's fiction with some great female leads trying to find a place in society. Desire is a bit more literary while The Good Comrade is a bit more fun, but both were just the type of story that tends to make my list of favorites.
The Romance of a Shop by Amy Levy: Fun sister story with some fun romances. Very easy to read and provided a fascinating look at the world of Victorian photography.
The Law and the Lady by Wilkie Collins: I was so invested in the main character, a woman who would overcome anything that tried to stop her from helping her husband.
The Heir of Redclyffe by Charlotte Mary Yonge: The prose is dense and the author's too preachy, but this had some of my favorite characters of the year (Charles Edmonstone my beloved).
Best series you discovered in 2023?
The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion. If it weren't for this question, it would be at the top spot in the last list. They hit so many sweet spots for my perfect comfort read--Victorian England, memorable characters, lightly fantastical setting, fun narrative voice, friendships and comedy and heartbreak and literature and just so much fun.
Best reread of the year?
Definitely The Lord of the Rings. I had liked the series after my first read, but my appreciation was mostly bolstered by the fact that I'm surrounded by a huge fandom for it. This year's reread made me truly appreciate it for the masterwork it is and made it a cornerstone of my interior life.
If it weren't for that, this spot would go to A Christmas Carol, because I was shocked to find that it really is good enough to earn its dominant place in pop culture. The descriptions of Christmas are some of the best things in literature.
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