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#Elizabeth Cronin
old-wild-child · 1 month
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Having seen many movies with a similar premise, I was expecting Drop Dead Fred to be about Fred coming to life, maturing with the help of Lizzie, and then falling in love with her. I was NOT expecting this heartbreaking story about a broken woman who learns to stand up for herself and becoming comfortable with independence. I’m crying.
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verypsbfan019 · 1 year
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Drop Dead Fred (1991)
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I digitalized the remake of a very old fanart. I was obsessed with this movie when I was 13 but I didn't make any fanart of it until I could finally watch the whole movie at age 17 on 2018, on YouTube lol
I really loved the characters and their dynamic. A young woman named Elizabeth is passing through a bad time when she has to come back to her childhood home with her emotionally abusive mother after she lost her job and her husband cheated on her. Elizabeth finds out that Drop Dead Fred, her imaginary friend from childhood is back (or never left because he was trapped in a jack-in-the-box) and he can't leave until she finds her real self and happiness again (which is gonna be a funny disaster)
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This is from December 2018!
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wat-the-cur · 2 years
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I always got a bit of a vibe with Annabella and Lizzie, like its interesting Annabella was really portrayed as the evil other woman more another victim of Charles similar to Lizzie. When she said 'you said she was mousy!' It reminded me of the squidward meme 'oh no he's hot!' I also kinda thought what Lizzie was wearing in the end scene was a bit Fred-esque, like the whole film she's mainly in dresses but has a more masculine outfit at the end like she's embracing that side of her.
There did seem to be some sort if implication there, considering Fred’s interest in Annabella. It’s interesting as well that when Lizzie complements Annabella’s dress, she doesn’t just call it pretty, she calls it ”slinky”. I definitely get closeted bisexual vibes from Lizzie. I also really like her wardrobe change at the end of the film. While I admit that I’ll always wish they really butched her up, I’m pretty content with the ”Fredness” of her outfit, with the braces and everything. She definitely is the more masculine half to Mickey’s feminine half, which is really nice to see.
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headcanon:
Drop Dead Fred is an alter/fictiv of Lizzie because Lizzie is a system
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moviesandmania · 8 months
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THE MOOR (2023) British mystery horror premiering at FrightFest
‘Dark. Evil. Awake.’ The Moor is a 2023 British horror film about a psychic investigating the haunted moor where a young boy’s body is apparently buried. Directed by Chris Cronin – making his feature-length directorial debut – from a screenplay written by Paul Thomas. The Nuclear Tangerine production stars Sophia La Porta, David Edward-Robertson, Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips, Bernard Hill, Mark…
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coiled-dragon · 3 days
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Favorite Films Of 2023
Five Nights at Freddy's dir. Emma Tammi M3GAN dir. Gerard Johnstone Cocaine Bear dir. Elizabeth Banks Evil Dead Rise dir. Lee Cronin The Passenger dir. Carter Smith Renfield dir. Chris McKay
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cannibalspicnic · 3 months
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@homoqueerjewhobbit tagged me for 9 new films I saw in 2023! Thanks!
INFINITY POOL dir. Brandon Cronenberg (Jan 2023)
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COCAINE BEAR dir. Elizabeth Banks (Feb 2023)
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EVIL DEAD RISE dir. Lee Cronin (April 2023)
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BEAU IS AFRAID dir. Ari Aster (April 2023)
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INFLUENCER dir. Kurtis David Harder (May 2023)
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NIMONA dir. Nick Bruno, Troy Quane (June 2023)
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TALK TO ME dir. Danny Philippou, Michael Philippou (July 2023)
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SLOTHERHOUSE dir. Matthew Goodhue (Aug 2023)
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SUITABLE FLESH dir. Joe Lynch (Oct 2023)
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And I'll tag (no pressure, only if you feel like it) @dressed-in-rain @moocowmoocow @lenny-kosnowski @weyounpussyindulgence @wernerherzoghaircut @anatomicalhearteyes @margotgrissom and anyone else who'd like to do it!
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camillasgirl · 1 year
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Historic chairs to be reused for the Coronation
In addition to St Edward’s Chair (Coronation Chair), which is used for the moment of crowning, The King and The Queen Consort will be seated in Chairs of Estate and Throne Chairs at different points during the service.
In the interest of sustainability, Their Majesties have chosen to use Chairs of Estate and Throne Chairs from the Royal Collection made for previous Coronations. These have been conserved, restored and adapted as required.
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The Chairs of Estate which will be used on the 6th May 2023 were made in 1953 by the London firm White, Allom and Company for the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on 2nd June 1953.
Their Majesties will be sat in the Throne Chairs for the Enthroning and the Homage. These chairs were made for the Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on 12th May 1937.
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Earlier this year, Their Majesties visited the Royal School of Needlework to meet craftspeople and embroiders who contributed to the project. As The Duchess of Cornwall, Her Majesty The Queen Consort became Patron of the Royal School of Needlework in 2017.
Chairs of Estate
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II used her Chair of Estate during the 1953 service, while the companion Chair of Estate for Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, was not used at the Service itself but was delivered to Buckingham Palace, where both Chairs have been on display in the Throne Room for many years.  
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The Chairs of Estate are made from carved and gilded beechwood in the seventeenth century-style which was used for earlier Chairs of Estate. The cyphers of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip are featured in the carving of the giltwood stretcher joining the front legs, together with the national emblems of a rose, thistle, and shamrock.
The Chairs of Estate will be used during the early parts of the Service and for the Coronation of Her Majesty The Queen Consort.
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In preparation for the Coronation, Gilding and Furniture Conservators from the Royal Collection Trust have cleaned, restored and consolidated the giltwood frames. New silk damask was woven by the Humphries Weaving Company, Suffolk to the same pattern with which they were originally upholstered. This was to allow for the cyphers of The King and The Queen Consort to replace those of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, which were removed and will be kept in the Royal Collection.
The new cyphers for the Chairs of Estate have been hand embroidered by the Royal School of Needlework, and created with cloth of gold, woven with a metal thread. The cloth of gold was then embellished with gold metallic threads. Upon completion, the cyphers were applied onto the silk damask using the appliquè technique. The upholstery was completed by the Royal Household’s upholsterers, including the re-use of the original braid and trimmings.
Throne Chairs
Made by White, Allom and Company, in a seventeenth century style which in turn was based on X-framed Tudor stools. The Chairs were upholstered in crimson velvet and applied with the Royal Arms of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.
In preparation for the Coronation, the Chairs have been conserved by the Royal Collection Trust’s Furniture Conservators. The crimson silk velvet has been replaced with new velvet and trimmings and the chairs reupholstered by the firm of AT Cronin Workshop Ltd.
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New silk braid and trellis fringe, replicating the original trimmings of the Throne Chairs has been woven by Heritage Trimmings Ltd of Derby. The silk was produced by The Humphries Weaving Company, Suffolk, and the silk for the fringe has been specially dyed by Gainsborough Silks, Suffolk. The Royal School of Needlework conserved the original embroidered Coat of Arms on His Majesty’s chair before transferring it onto the new velvet.
In addition, the new Coat of Arms of The Queen Consort has been hand embroidered on Her Majesty’s Throne Chair using the silk shading technique, which has been applied to the new velvet.
St Edward’s Chair (Coronation Chair)
Made over 700 years ago, from Baltic oak and first used at the Coronation of King Edward II. During Their Majesties Coronation on May 6th, His Majesty will be crowned King on St Edward’s Chair.
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Congregation Chairs
One hundred chairs have been made in collaboration between The Royal Household, Royal Warrant Holder furniture maker N.E.J Stephenson and The Prince’s Foundation. These chairs were designed by N.E.J Stephenson and will be positioned in Westminster Abbey.
The Chairs have been covered in blue velvet and feature the cyphers of Their Majesties.
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The frames of several of the Congregation Chairs were made by six young graduates from The Prince’s Foundation at the Snowdon School of Furniture at Highgrove using traditional materials and techniques to create the chairs with sustainable British oak. This forms part of the wider work carried out by The Prince’s Foundation to preserve traditional skills that are at risk of being lost.
Following the Coronation, the Chairs will be auctioned, and the proceeds will be donated to charity.
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presidentialsims · 2 years
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Simerican 2024 Presidential Election candidates are announced.
Beginning | Previous | Next
Simerica’s three largest political parties have each released the official election posters for their respective candidates.
Incumbent President Henry Cronin of the Simtrist Party has launched his 2024 campaign with a rally in his home town of Brindleton, where the Cronin family has long been a fixture of local politics. The Cronin campaign seems to have pivoted from previous policies with the environment seems to have taken a backseat and economic inequality (which Cronin pledged to combat during his first term in the White House) does not feature in the Simtrist Party’s manifesto. Nevertheless, Cronin was greeted by a sizeable crowd who cheered his campaign slogan, “Leading Simerica into tomorrow”.
The Sim Workers’ Party have, for only the second time, nominated a presidential candidate after Elliot Fleig’s campaign performed better than expected, trouncing the Simertarians in many of their traditional strongholds, but this was not enough to defeat Cronin, who won the election in a landslide. Now, the SWP’s rising star Delilah Stokes, Congresswoman for Willow Creek’s Foundry Cove district, has entered the race. Stokes is not a political newcomer having run against Simertarian Party stalwart Jasper Monroe in the 2021 Gubernatorial election in Louisimana and suffering a narrow defeat. With many Simerican households facing a bleak economic outlook, Stokes is confident her campaign, which is promising progressive taxation and nationalisation of several key Simerican utilities, will win even more support than her predecessor and mentor, Party Leader Elliot Fleig.
Hoping to reverse the recent trend of poor electoral performance for the Simertarian Party, Ulysses T. Hatfield has also kicked off his campaign with a rally in his home state of Winconsim, where he is currently Governor. Taking to the stage alongside wife Ruby-Ann and children Billy, Hank, and Elizabeth, Governor Hatfield has promised to “resurrect traditional Simerican industries” which he sees as having lost out under the Cronin administration’s eco-friendly and “anti-business” policies. With the backing of a united and invigorated Simertarian Party, who seem to have put the Goth debacle firmly behind them, Hatfield is hoping to galvanise communities who have drifted away from Simertarian influence. With a well-funded campaign that is widely supported by many industries, Hatfield is President Cronin’s stiffest competition in this year’s election.
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theinsatiables · 11 months
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Reviewing Cult Classics: Drop Dead Fred
"This is easily one of the worst films I've ever seen," said Gene Siskel. What did he know anyway? He was only one half of a powerhouse movie critiquing duo that had been actively giving expert reviews for 30 years. Is it possible that he and everyone else overlooked the importance of mental health and protecting your peace, along with the quiet reveal about Fred’s true identity when so harshly rating the cult classic, "Drop Dead Fred?"
Fred is Elizabeth Cronin’s imaginary friend from the past who reappears after she suffers through a series of life shattering events. His chaotic nature makes him appear to be a nuisance who everyone tends to wish would just drop dead. His obnoxious antics consistently embarrass Elizabeth until she remembers his importance to her childhood. Through Fred’s special breed of support and encouragement, Elizabeth musters up enough courage to dump her cheating husband, Charles, and part ways with her manipulative and controlling mother. Considering the deep dive this movie journeys, a basic plot explanation simply isn’t giving what it needs to give, so let’s try another route.
Mental health is an overarching topic in the film, and it is easy to spot the tells if you pay close attention. Having a manipulative and controlling mother seems to be the free gift with birth; everyone has one. Some parents may blame concern for their meddling and this could very well be true, but imagine having a parent tell your five-year-old self how you never do anything right.
The verbal abuse Elizabeth suffers at the hands of her mother has likely stunted her growth into adulthood, which can be seen in the stark contrast between her friend Janie's appearance and Elizabeth’s seventies Holly Hobby style; ankle length frumpy floral dress with white socks and shiny black doll shoes. Is it possible she is suffering a form of arrested psychological development, meaning she remains stuck at the time of her childhood trauma? This would explain why she appears to be immature during the earlier years of her marriage, the person who has been gaslighting Elizabeth throughout his entire affair with Annabella.
Then there’s Fred.
After her husband’s infidelity left her all alone, Elizabeth moves back to her mother’s home, where she is treated as a child by being banned from the living room carpet that has been roped off. It is at this point when Fred makes his return to discover a grown up Lizzy Cronin. The first “game” he pulls her into is using dog waste to destroy the very area she was told to stay away from. The next morning, she wakes to find her mother vigorously scrubbing the excrement from the carpet. For an imaginary friend, he sure did get the assignment. No one puts Lizzy in the corner.
Lizzy Cronin’s struggles first take shape at age five, when she is forced to create Fred as a defense mechanism against her mother’s abuse. 
During one of many flashbacks, we get a first look at young Lizzy’s relationship with her imaginary friend. Fred can be seen waking her up in the middle of the night to play robbers and slips a handmade striped sweater over her smock nightingale nightgown. Their adventure includes stealing silverware and smashing in a window, to which Fred exclaims how much he loves the breaking noises. When things go south, she recalls to Fred how her mother told her she never does anything right. This kind of self-doubt in a child can be damaging. Luckily, Fred is right there to remind Lizzy of just how great she is and encourages her to unapologetically walk in her truth.
Elizabeth's next memory of Fred takes her back to the most painful time in her life as a child. She was locked in her bedroom by her mother and placed under the care of a terrifying nurse after being taken to a child psychiatrist to discuss the dangers of Fred’s presence.
Dressed in a replica of the nightgown from her childhood, she remembers a time when her mother’s verbal abuse was so upsetting that Fred made an appearance and suggested they make a mud pie to cheer her up. Unfortunately, the dish was served using fine china and left a mess everywhere. Her imaginary friend then flees into Lizzy’s jack-in-the-box for safety. When her mother enters the room, she finds the mess and angrily pries the toy from her daughter's grip, leaving her in tears and begging for her friend. She then proceeds to tape the box shut and forbids Lizzy to open it, threatening that she would crush him to death. 
As an adult, Elizabeth discusses with Fred how much she suffered from his disappearance, telling him that after he left, "all of the life, spirit, and Fred went out of me." He then encourages her to flee from her mother’s watchful eye to attend a party her husband hosting. Elizabeth breaks the glass window in her bedroom, exclaiming how much she loves the breaking noises, and she and her imaginary friend escape. Although she is now an adult, and Fred has spent half of the movie hilariously condemning her for growing up, the two seem to have more in common than they know.
Once Elizabeth has won back Charles, the courage she gained takes a back seat to his manipulative ways when he convinces her to take the pills the psychiatrist prescribed to help phase Fred out. While Fred tries to warn her about the ill motives of her husband, she doesn't listen and begins to take the pills. For every pill she took Fred suffered through painful stomach cramps that slowly crippled him. When the romantic dinner Elizabeth prepared for Charles is revealed to be a mud pie, she threatens to take the last pill that will end his life. After overhearing Charles' plans to continue his affair, Elizabeth ends up developing a similar pain to what Fred us suffering from on the floor next to her. When Fred tells her to leave her husband, she confesses she is afraid of being alone.
Coming to terms with the reality of her feelings sends Elizabeth on a journey of freedom that starts with her becoming one with Fred as he walks her through her most repressed fears. When she arrives at an eerie replica of her mother’s home, she is immediately faced with a sinister version of her husband, whose advances she must reject in order to pass the first test. In the last task she finds her mother’s terrifying profile standing guard at her bedroom door refusing to let her in. With Fred’s encouragement, Elizabeth vanquishes her presence by shouting that she is no longer afraid of her.
Upon entering the room, she finds her five-year old self taped to the bed, frees her younger self, and discovers she must return home without Fred. Elizabeth no longer needed his physical form because she realized that Fred had been a part of her all along. 
She was Fred.
When Elizabeth returns, in true Fred fashion, she breaks up with Charles by dumping the dinner she had been preparing all over his head and wipes a booger on his cheek. When she returns to her mother’s home to make a final attempt at discussing her childhood trauma, she is met with the same verbal abuse that was used to tear her down as a child. She immediately made the decision to walk away from the very person who had been responsible for years of fear and anguish. Once her mother realized her daughter was leaving her life forever, she confessed her own fear of loneliness in an attempt to get her to stay, to which Elizabeth advised her to get a “Fred.”
If Elizabeth was her own imaginary friend all along how do we explain the little girl at the end who seems to have her own Fred? Simple. Fred is merely a physical manifestation brought on by the need to protect oneself from something. Whether it's a motherless child who is consistently being left with nannies or a woman who finds herself taking her loneliness out on her own daughter. Everyone is capable of creating their own Fred; it's called an alter ego.
Looking back at the movie, “Drop Dead Fred,” proves how beautifully complex the film truly is. Much like life, there are connections just waiting to be made in order to fully understand who we are and bring us to a place of healing. What may have been disregarded or harshly rated once before can now fully shine in the realization that our trauma and mental health is deserving of respect and a safe space to work through it with grace.
As for Elizabeth and Fred, perhaps the best part of their relationship was that he never gave up on her and gave her the strength she needed to call the "mega beast" out on her manipulative pile of shit.
-Tracee Carter
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amplifyme · 1 year
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@ladytp​ offered this one up to anyone who wanted to play. And since I’m tapped out from writing fic for the day, I thought I’d give this a shot.
1. Are you named after anyone? My middle name was supposed to be Elizabeth, after my great grandmother. But my mom’s OB/GYN, who delivered her four previous children, decided that Beth was a better fit with my first name than Elizabeth, so he filled out my birth certificate with that instead.
2. When was the last time you cried? During my reread of The Passage. Justin Cronin is an amazingly lyrical writer, and the way he strings words together brings me to tears sometimes.
3. Do you use sarcasm? I live for sarcasm. So, yeah, all the time.
4. What's the first thing you notice about people?  The eyes are the windows to the soul, right? That seems to be what I focus in on first. And then I rely on my gut, and picking up on the vibes I get. My gut very rarely steers me wrong.
5. What’s your eye color? Blue-green. It all seems to depend on my mood, the lighting, and what color I’m wearing as to which color is most predominate. 
6. Scary movie or happy ending? I’m a sap, so a happy ending is really satisfyingly.
7. Any special talents? Um, I’ve been told I’m good at stringing words together in a pleasing way. I can also cook like a motherfucker, but I rarely do that these days. It’s no fun cooking only for myself, so simple and easy is the route I usually take.
8. Where were you born? Smack-dab in the middle of corn and soybean country in the great US of A. Out on the flatlands. Where there’s nothing to stop the wind. 
9. What are your hobbies? Writing, reading, immersing myself in binge watches of older, beloved TV shows. 
10. Do you have any pets? Levon the Cat, my 16 year-old constant companion. We lost his older sister Sassy back in 2018. Now it’s just me and Levon against the world. That’s him in the foreground, and Sassy in the rear. I honestly don’t know what I’ll do when I have to say good-bye to him. I don’t even want to think about it.
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11. What sports do you play/have played? Not much, since I was hit by a car when I was 12. Pretty much permanently fucked up my left knee, despite several surgeries to repair the damage. Now that I’m older, it’s even more difficult to be as bendy as I’d like to be. But I always enjoyed playing volleyball, for some incomprehensible reason. 
12. How tall are you? I reached my max height of 5′2″ in my late teens. I’ve since shrunk to 5′ almost 1″.
13. What was your favorite subject in school? English. English. And English. I do not do math or any other subject that requires linear or logical thinking. Math makes no sense to me. The creative part of my brain is and always has been the dominant part. Which sucks, because in a perfect world I would have ended up delivering and caring for babies and their mommas. But I’m just not wired to absorb the kind of information or knowledge that requires. 
14. Dream job? Other than OB/GYN? It would have to be being paid to do what has always brought me the most joy: telling stories.
Everyone should play. Tell me everything about you!
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plasticneonart · 1 year
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My to read list
The stars look down by Archibald Cronin ✅️
The Castle by Franz Kafka ✅️
The Scapegoat by Daphne du Maurier
The Clown by Heinrich Böll
We: a novel by Yevgeny Zamyatin ✅️
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
Sanctuary by William Faulkner
Gertrud by Hermann Hesse✅️
Narcissus and Goldmund (Death and the Lover) by Hermann Hesse
Islands in the Stream by Ernest Hemingway
Ruth by Elizabeth Gaskell
Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell
A Fairly Honourable Defeat by Iris Murdoch
A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh
Tortilla Flat by John Steinbeck
The Foundation Pit by Andrei Platonov
King, Queen, Knave by Vladimir Nabokov
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onebluebookworm · 2 years
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June 2022 Book Club Picks
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The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde: Dorian Gray is young, beautiful, and innocent - the perfect subject for portrait artist Basil Hallward to capture on the canvas. Basil’s acquaintance Lord Henry Wotton agrees, but laments the cruelty of Dorian losing his beauty and vitality to the ravages of age, while his portrait remains unchanged. Dorian, influenced by Lord Henry’s hedonistic worldview, utters a terrible wish - if only his portrait could age instead. As Dorian descends further into selfish sin, his portrait continues to twist, a hideous reflection of his crimes.
Queer: A Graphic History by Meg-John Baker: The relatively new field of queer theory can often seem vast and unapproachable to the uninitiated. Through this comprehensive and beautifully illustrated guide, scholar Meg-John Baker and cartoonist Julia Scheele aim to demystify the many tenants and schools of thought, from Kinsey and Butler’s early groundwork theories to more modern, inclusive takes.
The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies by Vito Russo: Traces the history and social implications of homosexuality portrayed on film, from the Pansy Craze and sissy characters of early film, to the various backlashes homosexuality in film has faced, to the multitude of censorship attempts to keep gay representation off the screen.
How to Survive a Plague: The Inside Story of How Citizens and Scientists Tames AIDS by David France: Part history, part social commentary, part memoir, and part political manifesto, David France minutely tracks the full course of the American AIDS epidemic, to the culture wars of the early years, to the fight for life in the later years. Heartbreaking in many place; you will bawl like a baby.
Beautiful Music for Ugly Children by Kristen Cronin-Mills: Gabe is like a record - he has an A side that everyone knows, and a B side, which isn’t as well known, but just as good. His A side is Elizabeth, assigned female at birth and part of a family that isn’t quite ready to accept the truth, that he’s a boy and always has been. But at night, on his radio show, Gabe lets his B side play free and loud. And when a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity comes along, Gabe has to choose whether he’s ready to let everyone hear his B side.
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swampflix · 6 months
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Something Weird (1967)
“When an electrical accident disfigures the face of Cronin Mitchell (Tony McCabe), he also acquires strange psychic powers.  He promptly makes a bargain with a witch who restores his looks if he will become her lover.  However, though the world sees her as a sexy cutie named Ellen (Elizabeth Lee), Mitchell’s new girlfriend is actually an ugly old crone.  After expelling a ghost from a funeral…
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brookstonalmanac · 7 months
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Birthdays 9.30
Beer Birthdays
Frank H. Stahl (1876)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Miguel de Cervantes; Spanish writer (1547)
Erika Eleniak; model, actor (1969)
Enrico Fermi; Italian physicist (1901)
Madeline Kahn; actor (1942)
Stanley Kramer; film director (1913)
Famous Birthdays
Michelangelo Antonioni; film director (1912)
Gene Autry; country singer (1907)
Stan Berenstain; children's writer (1923)
Francois Boucher; French artist (1703)
Andrew "Dice" Clay; comedian (1957)
Les Claypool; rock bassist (1963)
James Watson Cronin; nuclear physicist (1931)
Anita Ekberg; actor (1931)
James Fogle; writer (1936)
Greer Garson; actor (1903)
Elizabeth Gaskell; English writer (1810)
Bryant Gumbel; television broadcaster (1948)
Trevor Howard; actor (1913)
Stuart M. Kaminsky; writer (1934)
Zachary Levi; actor (1980)
Jerry Lee Lewis; rock singer, pianist (1935)
Larry Linville; actor (1939)
Emily Lloyd; actor (1970)
Ian McShane; actor (1942)
Horatio Nelson; English naval officer (1758)
Mike Post; composer (1944)
Quick Draw McGraw; cartoon character
Tintoretto; Italian artist (1518)
Lech Walesa; Polish solidarity leader (1943)
Ian Wallace; rock drummer (1946)
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desmoinesnewsdesk · 11 months
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Dr. Elizabeth Cronin Selected as Top Psychologist of the Year by IAOTP
http://dlvr.it/Sp8QWl
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