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.
some request drawings I made :)
for @kinksheriff, @caryelwesmeow, @theflirtmeister (I had to draw Knuckles Cary I am sorry) and @whatifwekissedinthesawbathroom <33
I used some random color palettes I liked! :3
FAN: Ben, you once referenced a video of Freddy eating a banana with his Kaz gloves on and you never posted the video and I’m here to beg you for the video, please!
It's definitely cheesy and a rip off of a couple storylines. It has a crazy good cast in almost every speaking line. The longest ending ever it felt, blew LOTR out in that category. The ending was not a great twist, at least a 1 of the endings.
Sixteen signs in Times Square were turned out by one small switch operated by the sign designer Douglas Leigh, March 1, 1942. The city had enacted a nightly dimout that was meant to protect New York from both air and naval attacks by disguising the recognizable skyline. There were no lights above street level, outdoor baseball games were banned, and Times Square was a “gloomy cavern.”