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The culture is out of control, everyone knows it, and Dancing to Mozart is an imaginative satire that will appeal to readers who sense that the best way to deal with the situation is to have a good laugh at its expense. Personal relationships, silly behavior, Hollywood movies, extremes in politics and religion-eccentric characters and other wacky stuff offer the reader a good deal of amusement in colorful worldwide settings that include Europe, Africa, Asia, and New York City. Of course, there is a plot to the story, and it carries the reader along to the final and sensible ending, where all is resolved and the characters come to a common sense view of themselves and the world around them.
REALITY SLOWS ME DOWN offers a wide variety of audition pieces for professional actors, as well as high school and college students and actors performing in community theaters. The contents have a broad range of choices in age, emotional tones, and personality characterizations that will suit any actor's need and inclination. These include attitudes of irony, desperation, bewilderment, suffering, anger, and exhilaration. Further, five dialogues are given for practice with friends and actors to be used for fun and practice. As well, the various speeches may be used as presentation pieces before a studio audience.
Here is a sports-mystery novel about the Negro League, taking place in 1946 and narrated by the main character, Carl "Moonbeam" Slyder, second baseman for the fictional Jersey City Bluebirds. The good-natured, thoughtful Moonbeam gets involved in solving the murder of another, younger player, handsome, mysterious Buster Fenton, with a future in the Major Leagues. Buster, however, has gotten involved with a white woman, whose husband, as it turns out, has has him killed near Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. Meanwhile, Moonbeam links up with Buster's African-American fiancée, Jamesetta Kelly, who helps him solve the crime. The novel reviews racial attitudes of the 1940s as the Major Leagues are about to be integrated. It introduces real characters, such as Satchel Paige, Adam Clayton Powell, Bumpy Johnson, Hank Thompson, and others. Comedy and baseball action mix with the serious theme of lost talent in a world that failed to appreciate the black ball player--symbolic of the racial situation in general.
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Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.