Don't need no diamonds, you're my rock
And I'm okay with a Ring Pop
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been really enjoying the new season and wanted to take a crack at some vs Dracula design concepts,,,I love them so bad. might change them up a bit as time goes on but for now take them and this bonus doodle
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Shh, the cat is sunbathing!
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“First that nice Romeo boy, now Hamlet and his family. Sometimes I think we shouldn’t even sell poison.”
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Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier in Romeo and Juliet, which ran for a month at the 51st St. Theater (later the Mark Hellinger; now a church) in 1940. Dame May Whitty played Juliet's nurse, Edmond O'Brien was Mercutio, and Cornell Wilde was Tybalt. Olivier produced, directed, and (lavishly) designed the production in addition to starring in it. The critics were not kind: "Much scenery: no play," said Brooks Atkinson in the Times. Time magazine said that Leigh “looked like a poem but had no sense of poetry.” Leigh and Olivier were several years into a passionate romance that would, a few months after the play, result in marriage.
Photo: Getty Images
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Am I crazy or does Romeo look like….
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I can imagine Romeo talking to P about Carlo
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An important undergraduate in the Ziegfeld Training School for nurses. She is here depicted as the nurse in the current Follies caricature of Mr. W. Shakespeare’s well-known five-reel heart-thriller—”Romeo and Juliet.” The age of the nurse is open to fair-minded criticism—but no word of carp or cavil could possibly be breathed in regard to her qualifications as a ministering angel. —Vanity Fair, August 1916
Publicity photograph of Justine Johnstone in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1916
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Romeo and Carlo were such troublemakers, look at them graffitiing all over a painting at the red lobster inn… unbelievable…
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Edward: *talking about how he’s not human and can’t be poisoned or stabbed through the heart*
Some bored student sitting near him eavesdropping instead of watching Romeo and Juliette:
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'Spy Again' is so much sadder if you know the ending of the show. Like, the whole reason Curt gets back in the field was because he thought that's what Owen would want ('Owen would want me to do this / So I know that I'll get through it'). But then it's revealed that the entire time that Curt's been mourning, Owen's been working to dismantle the role of spies by making them useless, just so he could get revenge. The only reason Curt pulled himself out of his depression and alcohol problem is because he believed that's what Owen would want him to do, but by the end of the show, we see that he couldn't have been more wrong.
God the writing of this show is incredible.
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