Tumgik
#nathanielle webb
venusbloo · 4 months
Text
January Wrap-Up & February TBR
**Links below are for the books’ StoryGraph pages for reference. I do not receive any compensation for clicking links.** The first month of 2024 is already behind us, and now, it’s time for a recap of what I read in January 2024.  I also want to take this opportunity to review where I am on keeping up with my reading goals, compare what I wanted to read to what I actually read in January, and…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
dreamless-disco · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
my personal hell, but toddler play date!
1 note · View note
brokehorrorfan · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Leviathan will be released on 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray on February 20 via Kino Lorber. Directed by George P. Cosmatos (Rambo: First Blood Part II, Tombstone), the 1989 sci-fi/horror film includes reversible artwork.
David Webb Peoples (Blade Runner, 12 Monkeys) and Jeb Stuart (Die Hard, The Fugitive) wrote the script. Peter Weller, Richard Crenna, Amanda Pays, Daniel Stern, Ernie Hudson, Michael Carmine, Lisa Eilbacher, and Héctor Elizondo star.
Leviathan has been newly restored in 4K from the 35mm interpositive with Dolby Vision/HDR and 5.1 surround and lossless 2.0 audio. Special features are listed below.
Disc 1 - 4K UHD:
Audio commentary by film historians Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson (new)
Disc 2 - Blu-ray:
Audio commentary by film historians Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson (new)
Leviathan: Monster Melting Pot - 2014 making-of featurette
Interview with actor Ernie Hudson
Interview with actor Hector Elizondo
Theatrical trailer
On the dark and forbidding ocean floor, the crew of a deep-sea mining rig discovers a sunken freighter that harbors a deadly secret: a genetic experiment gone horribly wrong. With a storm raging on the surface and no hope of rescue, the captain (Peter Weller) and his team are propelled into a spine-tingling battle for survival against the ultimate foe—a hideous monster that cannot die... and lives to kill.
Pre-order Leviathan.
22 notes · View notes
accidentalshifter · 1 month
Text
⚜️ William Webb (The First) ⚜️
While there are many iterations of Wiliam in the multiverse where this didn't happen, the DR that I am most linked to has chosen this as a canon event. Please be advised that my William Webb scripted timeline here is TLDR and for your sanity, I'd just carry on scrolling through Tumblr. But if you're still curious?? Then continue reading...
But seriously, maybe don't do that.
TW: Death, violence, murder, & dark themes. Will the First is also a wet, sad little sack just like all the other Wills in the Webb family. His story is PURPOSEFULLY SCRIPTED like this. His trauma is a motivating force to his actions in my DR and it is something I am personally willing to explore. This is a TVD person, after all.
Tumblr media
"I'd rather spend my time with books. They speak more truth than people ever will...and this book? This book speaks volumes."
-William Webb the 1st.
⚜️ The Webbs were prominent members of the English aristocracy since the Tudor Era. They were given an Earldom by King Henry (Fortshire) and boasted Catherine Parr as a relative. This is likely where the love of books and education comes from. Nathaniel Webb is the first to dip his toe into the textile and fashion trade. While the Webbs were rich & didn't have a need to muddle their hands in the merchant class, Nathaniel believed that a man was bound by a duty to build his own legacy. He wasn't happy just being an Earl of Fortshire.
⚜️ Nathaniel Webb establishes his first shop in England (1544), catering to English nobels and even those within the Royal Family. The outfits created were often marked by refined materials and sober design; instead of being gaudy, Nathaniel believed that focusing on the quality of the materials (over flashiness) would win over his clients. He was right. The atmosphere of England during this time was predominantly a struggle between Catholic and Protestant philosophies; so, Nathaniel's more subdued outfits became popular with clients who wanted to preserve their vow to God & rebuke the trappings of the material world while still remaining tasteful. A direct opposition from the French fashions of the time that loved to flaunt their opulence...
⚜️ The Webbs fall out of prominence in the English court when Catherine Parr transfers her position as Queen to the next in line. At least the Webbs had their thriving business! The popularity of the Webb shops make up for their decline in court, however. Not much changes for them in terms of finances. They enjoy more success in the fashion business than they ever did in court. Second only to Liberty London; their only real competition within the textile trade in England...
⚜️ Around 300 years pass. The business the Webbs started in the 1500's understandably goes through various ups and downs. When the 1800's roll around, the ruling patriarch of the Webb family is Joseph Webb. He has 2 sons & one daughter who dies very early on into her childhood. This devastates Joseph. He never emotionally recovers. The sons are mostly raised by their mother and neglected by their icy father. Joseph plunges himself into work, trying to reclaim the "glory days" of the family business in order to cope with his grief. He sees a burgeoning opportunity in the Americas to reestablish & expand his trade in new lands where the Webb family could flourish without their old competition.
⚜️ In 1855, the Webbs board a ship going to the Americas after saying their goodbyes to London. Unfortunately, Joseph dies during the journey to the New World. He is survived by his two sons and his wife. The business is transferred to the oldest son, Harding Webb. The Webbs set up shop in New Orleans. The competition, however, is unexpectedly fierce as New Orleans is predominantly opulent of attitude & favors French fashions. The more austere outfits that the Webbs specialize in aren't as popular here. The family struggles to thrive in the Big Easy...
Side Note: In TVD canon, the Originals were present in New Orleans in the 1820s. But in my DR, the Original's presence in NOLA has been extended to 1855.
⚜️ While Harding Webb was the extroverted one, his little brother William was the quiet & introverted one. He had no mind for money, business, or building a reputation in this new land his family had moved themselves to. He was far more interested in books, education, & documenting what he saw. However, with the Webbs struggling, William was forced to put his books aside to work as a tailor in the shop while Harding ingratiated himself into society upon the premise that you're only as rich as the people you know. William doesn't acclimate well to being a tailor and longs for London. For the solitude of his library. For a more civilized conversation amongst learned men. As if answering William's prayer, Elijah Mikaelson strolls into the store on a slow & muggy afternoon...
⚜️ Not easily impressed by the opulent and gaudy fashions of NOLA's clothing shoppes, Elijah gives the Webb's store an opportunity to design his clothes. Elijah prefers the "less is more" approach that the Webbs specialize in and commissions them to design several suits, ties, and other apparel for him. William spends time taking Elijah's measurements & going over different materials with the man. During this process, Elijah and William bond over a mutual love of books and reading the classics. They become quick friends. Elijah often visits the shop after his initial purchase to commission more clothes...but soon turns into an excuse to talk to someone "civilized" like him. They begin exchanging books with each other.
⚜️ Meanwhile, Harding Webb has fallen into the partying and gambling crowd, inevitably coming into contact with Klaus Mikaelson & the socialites of New Orleans. Harding Webb thinks he can amass reputation, wealth, and status by "playing the game." He is spending large sums putting on fake appearances and gambling than he is investing into the Webb clothing store. Klaus sees Harding as a little man with little dreams and doesn't really like him. Klaus begins conspiring to kill Harding in a way that he feels suits the power-hungry attention seeker. He caught Harding flirting with HIS Rebekah, after all...
⚜️ Meanwhile, Elijah has been putting some major distance in-between himself & Klaus. He's been spending more time with William; discussing reading materials, philosophies, world-views, politics, culture, and everything else. One day, Elijah shows up to the Webb shoppe with a new book. An old book. Elijah asks William if he could translate it since the book isn't written in any (known) language. It seems like a bunch of gibberish to him. Even though he's certain the book contains some mystery. William says he loves a challenge & agrees to take a crack at deciphering it. Will doesn't really understand what he's actually agreeing to or how this decision will change the course of his (and his descendants) lives forever.
⚜️ A storm descends upon New Orleans. It blankets the colony-city in harsh rain, wind, hail, and lightning. For a week, New Orleans is locked down while the weather batters & beats it. During this time, nobody is visiting the shop much. William finally has time to spend on decoding the mystery of the book that Elijah gave him. Harding, strangely, has not come home...although, that isn't too odd for Harding who was prone to partying and debauchery. The only one who really notices that he's gone is Mrs. Webb (Samantha). Will holes himself up in his library during the rain storm, studying the book. The symbols and language inside of it are like nothing he has ever seen before. Just looking at it's pages scrambles his brain. And maybe it's just the ambiance of the storm, but Will swears that something is watching him from the corners of the library. A shadow of a man...
⚜️ William works long hours into the night in the library. He'd fall asleep on his desk while attempting to translate the book. Maybe the obsession to figure out the language fueled the weird nightmares he began to have? Will would dream of a priest. Of blood, death, & pages upon pages of ink. He'd wake, feeling on the edge of madness. Meanwhile, the rain and the storm outside raged...
⚜️ On the sixth day of the storm, in the dead of night, William is visited by Elijah. The man looks somehow different than his usual face. A deeper darkness that William hadn't seen before was present there. A small, ruby stain was there on his starched and pristine collar. Elijah asks Will if he's translated the book yet and Will shakes his head. Says no, tells Elijah that he's not even sure if it can be translated. Or if the language is legitimate. Elijah seems disappointed in Will's answer but accepts it nonetheless. He tells Will with a heavy heart to keep the book as a gift from him. Then, he stares William directly in the eyes & tells Will that he needs to leave New Orleans with his mother. That his brother is dead, he took his own life. And that the Webb family shouldn't come back. Elijah instructs Will to focus on settling down in an area that was out of the way from the popular colonies, somewhere not in Louisiana. And to forget about Elijah, his family, & their friendship entirely.
⚜️ On the 7th day of the storm, William and his mother pack their essentials. On the 8th day, the storm breaks, and the Webbs leave their house in New Orleans. They moved to Virginia to a small settlement called Mystic Falls. Among their things is the book...
⚜️ The Webbs are successful in Mystic Falls as tailors & running their fashions and textile shop. They began enjoying the refinements of their earlier Tudor-era wealth again. They began the construction of an estate with the shop a few blocks down from it. They switch signature austerity to include more frivolous designs with Samantha now contributing to the business as a tailor herself. Samantha's clients included: Katherine Pierce and Pearl at one point. Will's clients included the Fells, Gilberts, Salvatores, & the Lockwoods.
⚜️ William continues to suffer from strange, vivid nightmares after leaving New Orleans. The priest torments him into the early hours of the morning, calling upon Will to read the book and decode its secrets. Will grows a bit weirder than normal as the years stretch on. The influence of the book seemingly a stain now on his soul. One person he does admit this experience to is Jonathan Gilbert who is both intrigued and wary of William's claim at the same time...
⚜️ Will Webb doesn't participate in the 1864 "round up" event of Mystic Falls. As such, he isn't killed by Stefan or Damon Salvatore at the dinner party event. William does end up helping Jonathan with his experiments after the Salvatore brothers killed the Gilberts and friends. While Jonathan was obsessed with the Originals, Will is obsessed with the book. Will feels, at this point, that the priest inside his nightmares is actually an angel who has been sent to guide him to a permanent and eternal solution to the vampire menace. He just has to translate the complex linguistic code. Jonathan Gilbert disagrees, saying the most direct route to killing the vampires is to kill the Originals with the White Oak stake. It drives a significant wedge between the two. Jonathan feels that William's research won't gain the results they need and that the book is useless...
⚜️ The next event seals the "cursed" urban legend of the Webbs in Mystic Falls forever. William had been slowly decoding the book with the help of the priest in his nightmares. He finds that the book actually documents a ritual that, when enacted, could transform a regular human into a "super slayer" with the help of an archangel. At this same time, Will was dealing with the slow death of his mom who was sick. He saw an opportunity in that moment to prevent Samantha Webb from a terrible death and test out the ritual. On the day of a solar eclipse, William tries to make his mother into the first super slayer. He fails spectacularly. William is blamed for murder & insanity by the town of Mystic Falls. While both the Augustine Society & the Founder's Council know the truth of what William was working on, they unanimously bury the truth of William's work. William Webb goes down in history as a boogeyman in Mystic Falls. A scary urban legend similar to the Sanderson Sisters or the Headless Horseman.
Side Note: In my DR, Sleepy Hollow, Hocus Pocus, & Supernatural universes are linked.
⚜️ William Webb is survived by his wife and daughter who inherit the fashions and textile shop along with a considerable fortune. The taboo of William's insanity remains a smear on the family, however. Any Webb who lives in Mystic Falls is haunted by the whispers of speculation the town has on William Webb & what drove him to madness. Meanwhile, the book is passed down from each generation; an heirloom piece now. Its true nature is lost with William Webb's death. However! There's some information written within the Gilbert journals about William's book & what he was working on. Both the Augustine Society and the Founder's Council thinks the experiment that Will botched as an unfortunate result of the war against vampires.
3 notes · View notes
igotopinions · 5 months
Text
Books I Read in 2023
* = Re-read
Check out past years: 2012, 2013 (skipped), 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018,  2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022. Follow me on Goodreads to get these reviews as they happen. 1) A Book of Blades: Rogues in the House Presents edited by L.D. Whitney This book, assembled by the great guys behind the premier podcast in the genre, is an excellent way to sample a breadth of contemporary Sword & Sorcery fiction! My favorite story was "The Blood of Old Shard" by John R. Fultz, with Scott Oden and Howard Andrew Jones' tales close behind, and there were no duds in the mix. "The Blood..." really surprised me with a heart and inventiveness which the opening doesn't give away yet, you realize upon finishing, deftly sets up. 2) Fires of Azeroth by C.J. Cherryh Left my big ol’ spoiler-laden review on Goodreads for ya. 3) Black Paper: Writing in a Dark Time by Teju Cole 4) The Citadel of Forgotten Myths by Michael Moorcock *5) Neuromancer by William Gibson 6) The Expert System's Brother by Adrian Tchaikovsky 7) The Expert System’s Champion by Adrian Tchaikovsky I confess I finished the first book in this series having enjoyed myself, but wondering if I'd remember what I'd read a year from now. I don't have that concern with its follow-up. Tchaikovsky has enriched the world he set up in the first installment quite nicely, and I hope I get to explore it further in a third. 8) Old Moon Quarterly: Issue 3 9) Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner 10) The Gurkha and the Lord of Tuesday by Saad Z. Hossain 11) The Dreamthief's Daughter: A Tale of the Albino by Michael Moorcock 12) Cinema Speculation by Quentin Tarantino Do you think you’d enjoy hearing Tarantino discuss mainly his childhood and adolescence re: movies that meant a lot to him during that period? Congrats, this is extremely that. It could not be more that. 13) The Shadow of the Torturer by Gene Wolfe 14) Consider This: Moments in My Writing Life After Which Everything Was Different by Chuck Palahniuk Roughly 70/30 instructional / biographical. Has a lot of good advice, focusing on a more literary mode than classic genre stylings, all in a voice and coming from a place any Palahniuk fan will be familiar with (I would have been stunned NOT to find something like the "Voice of Authority" snippet in a writing book by Palahniuk). Entertaining and providing what mostly felt like useful, actionable advice, I'd say it can be handy for writers who aren't knowledgeable of the author's works, but knowing at least a couple of his books can help contextualize his advice so you can determine which parts are right for you or not. 15) Death Angel's Shadow by Karl Edward Wagner 16) Night Winds by Karl Edward Wagner 17) Wyngraf Issue #1 Edited by Nathaniel Webb 18) Rakefire and Other Stories by Jason Ray Carney 19) The White Lion by Scott Oden 20) Werner's Nomenclature of Colours: Adapted to Zoology, Botany, Chemistry, Mineralogy, Anatomy, and the Arts by Patrick Syme, Abraham Gottlob Werner (Illustrator) 21) Tehanu by Ursula K. Le Guin 22) Lord of a Shattered Land by Howard Andrew Jones *23) Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer 24) Authority by Jeff VanderMeer 25) Acceptance by Jeff VanderMeer *26) The Sailor on the Seas of Fate by Michael Moorcock 27) Kundo Wakes Up by Saad Z. Hossain 28) Swords in the Shadows, Edited by Cullen Bunn 29) The Lies of the Ajungo by Moses Ose Utomi 30) Doppelganger: A Trip into the Mirror World by Naomi Klein 31) The Encyclopedia of Amazons: Women Warriors from Antiquity to the Modern Era by Jessica Amanda Salmonson 32) New Edge Sword & Sorcery #1, Edited by Oliver Brackenbury 33) New Edge Sword & Sorcery #2, Edited by Oliver Brackenbury 34) A Book of Blades: Volume II: Rogues in the House Podcast Presents, Edited by L.D. Whitney 35) Old Moon Quarterly: Issue 4, Spring 2023: A Magazine of Dark Fantasy and Sword and Sorcery, Edited by OMQ 36) The Wingspan of Severed Hands by Joe Koch 37) The Sword of Rhiannon by Leigh Brackett 38) Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle 39) Old Moon Quarterly: Issue 5, Edited by OMQ STATS Non-Fiction: 6 Fiction: 33 Poetry Collections: 0 Comic Trades: 0 Wrote Myself: 2
2 notes · View notes
ninja-muse · 1 year
Text
End of 2022 Book Stats
Because I like crunching numbers and I think some of you might be interested? Maybe I’m just flattering myself…
Yearly total: 147 + 2
 rereads DNFs: 4 Queer books: 52 (35%) Authors of colour: 31 (21%) Books by women: 88 (60%) Books by nonbinary/genderqueer folk: 9 (6%) Canadian authors: 15 (10%) Off the TBR shelves: 30 (20%)
Compared to my 2021 stats, my percentages of queer books (subject matter and/or author), nonbinary authors, and authors of colour are holding roughly steady. My female and Canadian authors percentages are down. I also always try to set a goal for reading more classics and poetry. This year I read 9 (6%) and last year I was at 6 (3.7%). Success!
At the start of the year, I posted 22 reading goals for the year. I read all but one book off the list (Night Watch by Sarah Waters)! I also wanted to read at least one book off my TBR shelves per month (done) and increase my percentage of authors of colour from 22% (not done, basically holding steady). I was also hoping to have read more Canadian authors than I did, but at the same time, so much Canadian fiction just does not grab my interest.
Top Fiction (Not ranked)
Persuasion - Jane Austen
Babel - R.F. Kuang
The Mummy! - Jane Webb
A Strange and Stubborn Endurance - Foz Meadows
Semiosis - Sue Burke
Top Non-Fiction (Not ranked)
Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust - Yaffa Eliach
Highway of Tears - Jessica McDiarmid
1491 - Charles Mann
The Emperor of Scent - Chandler Burr
Let’s Do It! - Bob Stanley
Longest book

: The Fabliaux, translated by Nathaniel Durbin
Best queer book: A Strange and Stubborn Endurance by Foz Meadows
Most Impressed By:
The Emperor of Scent - Chandler Burr
Katzenjammer - Francesca Zappia
The Escapement - Lavie Tidhar
The Wolf Den - Elodie Harper
Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust - Yaffa Eliach
Hot Moon - Alan Smale
Biggest Disappointments:

High Times in the Low Parliament - Kelly Robson
Pride, Prejudice and Peril - Katie Oliver
Attrib. and other Stories - Eley Williams
The Monsters We Defy - Leslye Penelope
Epically Earnest - Molly Horan
Did I beat 2021? No.
Did I beat my Best Year Ever? No. That would be 2021.
Did I read more classics? Yes!
Did I read more Canadians? No.
Did I whittle my TBR shelves down any? No. I hauled 102 books, most of which were gifts, free copies from publishers, or hand-me-downs, and I read 30. This gives me a net gain of 72 books. There are also 29 ARCs on my floor. This is, as I’m fond of saying, fine and not at all worrying.
Was it a good reading year? It was fine? I read a lot of good books that weren’t particularly memorable, and a lot of okay books that barely were. And I kind of burned out halfway through the year and had to slow my pace to keep my interest in reading going.
Breakdowns by Month
January February March April May June July August September October November December
14 notes · View notes
Text
"Deep Sky" offers a glimpse into the very soul of space. (REVIEW)
In the sable vastness of space, a documentary titled Deep Sky (2024) IMAX captivates with its celestial cinema for everyone to see on IMAX. The art of Nathaniel Kahn melds with the narrative voice of Michelle Williams, crafting a visual saga of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)—humanity’s latest sentinel in the cosmos, stationed a million miles from our terrestrial home. As we reach toward…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
kennamchugh · 3 months
Text
"Deep Sky" Documentary Trailer, Poster and Images
Deep Sky brings the awe-inspiring images captured by NASA’s Webb Telescope to IMAX. You journey to the beginning of time and space, never-before-seen cosmic landscapes, and recently discovered exoplanets, planets around other stars. Directed by Nathaniel Kahn and narrated by Michelle Williams, Deep Sky follows the high-stakes global mission to build the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
spacenutspod · 7 months
Link
With guidance from the telescope's scientists, an actress, a computer animation artist, a composer, and many other experts, 'Deep Sky' aims to reintroduce us to the JWST's lens on our universe.
0 notes
oliverbrackenbury · 2 years
Link
I just checked an item off my sword & sorcery scene bucket list by getting to appear on Rogues in the House to discuss the new magazine I’m editing and the ethos behind it, both called New Edge Sword & Sorcery.
0 notes
thestageyshelf · 2 years
Text
SOLD 🎭 Jersey Boys @ Aylesbury Waterside Theatre 2015 (#79)
Title: Jersey Boys
Venue: Aylesbury Waterside Theatre
Year: 2015
Tumblr media
Condition: Creasing to front cover
Author: Book by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice. Music by Bob Gaudio. Lyrics by Bob Crewe
Director: Des McAnuff
Choreographer: Sergio Trujillo
Cast: Matt Corner, Sam Ferriday, Lewis Griffiths, Stephen Webb, Michael Pickering, Amelia Adams-Pearce, Damian Buhagiar, Ste Clough, Henry Davis, Joel Elferink, Leanne Garretty, Mark Heenahan, Dayle Hodge, Samantha Hull, Joe Maxwell, Nathaniel Morrison, Tom Partridge, Amy West
FIND ON EBAY HERE
0 notes
venusbloo · 8 months
Text
ARC Review: Wyngraf, Issue 3
Book: Wyngraf, Issue 3  Author: Nathaniel Webb, Editor  Pages: 202  Source: Nathaniel Webb  Publisher: Independently published  Genre: Cozy Fantasy, Literary Magazine  Publication Date: March 14, 2023  Goodreads Summary:  The beloved magazine of cozy fantasy returns with its greatest issue yet. Curl up with ten tales in the tradition of Legends & Lattes and The Hobbit . Wyngraf #3…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
dreamless-disco · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
party party party
1 note · View note
danbenzvi · 5 years
Text
Just listened to: “The Music Of Fosse/Verdon (Original Series Soundtrack)”
Tumblr media
[A little contextualizing is necessary here.  As this is a series about the lives and careers of two individuals with significant careers on Broadway and in film (Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon), there are a lot of well known Broadway numbers on this soundtrack.  As the show is meant to be documenting the numbers as performed (as opposed to within the context of the work), these numbers are not just “Actor X performs song A” but “Actor X as Actor Y performs Song A.”  I’ll spell it out more explicitly below.]
Featuring the following tracks:
Bianca Marroquin (as Chita Rivera), Rema Webb (as Paula Kelley) and The Fandango Girls - “Hey Big Spender” (from “Sweet Charity”)
PJ Benjamin (as Russ Brown), Nick Blaemire (as James Komack) and Brian Cali (as Nathaniel Frey) - “Heart” (from “Damn Yankees”)
Kelli Barrett (as Liza Minnelli) and The Kit Kat Girls - “Mein Herr” (from “Cabaret”)
Ethan Slater (as Joel Grey), Alysha Umphress and Morgan Weed - “Two Ladies” (from “Cabaret”) [Umphress and Weed’s characters are not given names in the episode.]
Kelli Barrett (as Liza Minnelli) - “Cabaret” (from “Cabaret”)
Nathan Barr - “Pas De Deux”
Tim Young (as John Rubinstein) - “Corner Of The Sky” (from “Pippin”)
Blake Baumgartner (as Nicole Fosse) - “I Guess I’ll Miss The Man” (from “Pippin”) [Yes, this is sung by Bob Fosse’s daughter.  And yes, in context, that is as weird as you might imagine.]
Bianca Marroquin (as Chita Rivera) - “All That Jazz” (from “Chicago”)
Tyler Hanes (as Jerry Orbach) and Sean Patrick Doyle (as Michael O’Haughey) - “We Both Reached For The Gun” (from “Chicago”)
Michelle Williams (as Gwen Verdon) - “Razzle Dazzle” (from “Chicago”)
Lin-Manuel Miranda (as Roy Scheider) - “Mr. Bojangles”
Alex Lacamoire - “Fosse/Verdon Theme”
5 notes · View notes
lazyjacks · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Galatea, 1886-09-07 Nathaniel L. Stebbins photographic collection Historic New England Reference Code PC047.02.0440.01168
65 notes · View notes
bamboozledjasontodd · 2 years
Text
Earth 187 Bat Family (& Their Mantles)
The “Core” Family:
Alfred Pennyworth - Penny-One
Bruce Wayne - Batman I
Selina Kyle - Catwoman I
Dick Grayson - Robin I, Nightwing I, Batman III (temporary and unwilling)
Barbara Gordon - Batgirl I, Oracle
Jason Todd - Robin II, Red Hood I, Phoenix
Tim Drake - Robin III, Red Robin, Cardinal
Cassandra Cain-Wayne - Batgirl II, Black Bat I, Batman IV
Stephanie Brown - Spoiler, Robin IV, Batgirl III, Nightwing III
Duke Thomas - Lark, The Signal
Damian Wayne - Robin VI, Redbird, Nightwing IV
Athanasia Al Ghul Wayne - Blackbird, Flamebird III
The Extended Family:
Kate Kane - Batwoman II
Luke Fox - Batwing
Minhkhoa Khan - Ghost-Maker
Bilal Asselah - Nightrunner
Jace Fox - Batman (currently working on where to put him in the order that is why there is no number at the moment) 
Julia Pennyworth - Penny-Two
Ryan Wilder - Batwoman III
Holly Robinson - Catgirl I, Catwoman II
Bette Kane - Bat-Girl, Flamebird I, Hawkfire
Jean-Paul Valley - Batman II, Azrael
Harper Row - Bluebird
Carrie Kelley - Robin V, Catgirl II, Redtail 
Tiffany Fox - Batgirl IV, Delphi
Nell Little - Batgirl V
Maps Mizoguchi - Robin VII
Alina Shelley Wayne- Sparrow
Other Associates:
Commissioner James Gordon
Dr. Leslie Tompkins
Dr. Victoria October
Lucius Fox
Tamara Fox
Cullen Row
Onyx Adams
Helena Bertinelli - Huntress I
Charlie Gage-Radcliffe - Misfit, Huntress II
Clarissa Todd* - Red Hood II
Next Generation Kids Not Otherwise Classified:
Mariand’r “Mar’i” Grayson - Nightstar, Nightingale 
Jakand’r “Jake” Grayson - Wildfire 
Elainna Grayson - Batwoman IV
Helena Wayne - Robin VIII, Batgirl VI, Huntress III, Batman V
Thomas Wayne - Black Bat II
Bruce Wayne Jr.  - Robin IX
Tyler Todd - Blue Hood, Blue Jay
Nathaniel Todd* 
Terry McGinnis- Batman VI
Matt McGinnis- Robin X
Nissa - Batgirl VII
Authors Notes:
* Denotes an OC
Kathy Kane-Webb was the first (very brief) Batwoman but I don’t have her on here because...reasons lol. Anyways, these are all subject to change as I write and further plot out this universe. Technically speaking I could have added a ton of characters under “Other Associates” because of who I have dating/marrying who but this post was already too long and that information feels like I should put it into household posts if that make sense. Additionally, I would like to credit @ flashhwing and @ dykerachelsummers with the codename Phoenix for Jason!! 
53 notes · View notes