Short animatic of Heinz and Perry dancing one of the many songs they dance at their wedding on the fic "Forever and a Day" by @inators
It was such a experience to be working on this while Inators was working on the Forever and a Day fic. I'm so happy that we got to collaborate on this perryshmirtz wedding project ❤️. It took me a while, but I am so happy and excited to finally being able to share this with everyone. I worked very very hard on it 🤓. Enjoy!
Special thanks to @inators for supporting me during the making process 💕
Credits:
Song -> Million ways - HRVY Choreography -> Million ways oficial video
Apparently today is global 'Bond Day' so here is a pic of Matthew Goode that is guaranteed to shake AND stir us up.
Don't forget that you can hear Matthew Goode as Bond narrating 'Forever and a Day' on audible -
7 hours and 36 minutes of that velvet voice.
📷 Matthew Goode at the 'The Imitation Game' New York Premiere Photo by Slaven Vlasic /Audible + pic of Matthew from 'The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales' BTS film/ David Max Freedman
Forever and a Day
This exaggerated way of saying “a really long time” would have been considered poetic in the sixteenth century. William Shakespeare popularized the saying in his play The Taming of the Shrew (probably written in the early 1590s and first printed in 1623).
Though Shakespeare is often credited with coining the phrase, he wasn’t the first writer to use it. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Thomas Paynell’s translation of Ulrich von Hutten’s De Morbo Gallico put the words in a much less romantic context. The treatise on the French disease, or syphilis, includes the sentence: “Let them bid farewell forever and a day to these, that go about to restore us from diseases with their disputations.” And it’s very possible it’s a folk alteration of a much earlier phrase: Forever and aye (or ay—usually rhymes with day) is attested as early as the 1400s, with the OED defining aye as “ever, always, continually”—meaning forever and aye can be taken to mean “for all future as well as present time.”
He may not have invented it, but Shakespeare did help make the saying a cliché; the phrase has been used so much that it now elicits groans instead of swoons. Even he couldn’t resist reusing it: Forever and a day also appears in his comedy As You Like It, written around 1600.
Not sure if anyone is in here but I posted the conclusion of this on my Patreon today so here’s the full penultimate page two days early :) Join to see the last page now, or tomorrow’s Night Bright as Day, still ongoing!
“You filled a part of my soul I always thought would be empty, and you healed scars I never knew existed. And I realized...it's not that I didn't believe in love before. It's that I was saving it all for you.”