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#will hutcheson
adashofginger · 6 months
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"Green eyes envy me."
Cozy | Beyoncé
Model: Will Hutcheson
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raudur · 2 years
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imkeepinit · 12 days
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tilting-at-windmills · 2 months
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Prompt: fresh start, last November/December.
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upthewitchypunx · 1 year
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https://www.llewellyn.com/blog/2023/01/join-us-for-our-next-llewellyn-virtual-author-forum-folk-magic/
Check out this free Virtual Author forum with some pretty great folk magic people. It's Friday February 10th at 2pm Central Time.
Join us for our next Llewellyn Virtual Author Forum! This bi-monthly series of free online roundtable events will feature your favorite Llewellyn authors discussing topics important to you and answering your questions.
Our next in the series, on Folk Magic, will feature Ozark Mountain Spellbook author Brandon Weston; Cory Thomas Hutcheson, author of New World Witchery and the forthcoming Llewellyn’s Complete Book of North American Folk Magic; Madame Pamita, author of Baba Yaga’s Book of Witchcraft; Water Magic author Lilith Dorsey; and H. Byron Ballard, author of Roots, Branches & Spirits. Join the live conversation, and ask them your questions!
We’ll be streaming live on Crowdcast—save your spot today!
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fourorfivemovements · 2 years
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Films Watched in 2022:
72. The Evil of Frankenstein (1964) - Dir. Freddie Francis
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raglanphd · 2 years
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bobbie-robron · 2 years
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A podcast with Jane Hutcheson & Ian Sharrock (aka Sandie & Jackie Merrick).
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innabesedina · 2 years
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adashofginger · 10 months
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"I drew curtains closed, drank my poison all alone."
The Great War | Taylor Swift
Model: Will Hutcheson
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raudur · 2 years
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outoftowninac · 2 years
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THE HONEY BEE
1913
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The Honey Bee is a play in four acts by Hutcheson Boyd and Rudolph Bunner. It was originally produced by Harrison Grey Fiske. The cast included Allan Pollock, Fanny Hartz, Marie Chambers, Benjamin Kauser, Eugene A. Hohenwart, Marion Pullar, and Norris and Helen Millington as the Witherspoon children. 
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[Note: All three of the creative staff’s names have been misspelled in the above ad from the Atlantic City Press.]
The play is set in an apartment loft in Hoboken NJ. 
It was to mark the return of actress Marie Shotwell, who had ostensibly retired after her marriage to former Savannah GA police chief William G. Austin. However, when the play got to Atlantic City, Shotwell’s name was not on the cast list. 
Allan Pollack was cast because his sketches for the scenery were tucked inside the manuscript of the play given to Harrison Fiske a year earlier. Instead, he wound up being cast to play Professor Witherspoon. 
“Mr. Allan Pollock heads the cast. He appeared somewhat bewildered last evening. Eventually he seemed to give up his struggle to understand the drift of the play.” ~ THE WASHINGTON POST
Producer Harrison Grey Fiske was husband to the inimitable Mrs. Fiske, and the pair often worked together, but not with The Honey Bee. 
“The play is presented by Mr. Harrison Grey Fiske, one of the most artistic and intelligent producers in America. We cannot understand why the manuscript attracted his attention.” ~ THE WASHINGTON POST
Rehearsal began on October 9, 1913 in Manhattan. 
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The play premiered in Atlantic City at Nixon’s Apollo Theatre on the Boardwalk on November 6, 1913. As per usual, it was touted as ‘Prior to the New York Opening.’  They forgot to mention that they were referring to New York state, not New York City!  
“The plot baffles any auditor.” ~ THE WASHINGTON POST
After AC, the play moved to the Columbia Theatre in Washington DC, opening there on November 10th. While in Washington, the play was reviewed by their mistress of gossip, Julia Murdock. 
[ed: I usually don’t reprint reviews in toto, but this one is well worth a read. For those of short attention span, I have bolded the pithy highlights.]
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There’s a little rhyme at the head of the Columbia program this week which announces that when the wife forsakes the house and goes out Into the world, said house must, perforce, stand upon its head. 
The little comedy, however, "The Honey Bee," which Harrison Grey Fiske is exploiting this week at the F street playhouse, will have to have something more satisfactory in the way of careful elocution and artistic action before it can stand on Its head or its heels or any other way very long. It has a number of clever lines, so clever, that even the actors themselves seem afraid of them and appear to give up and say "Dear me. this will never get across, so why try?" The man who goes to the theater with me occasionally says that some of these days, when the feminist movement Is as far back In history as the antiquated manners which make "She Stoops to Conquer" so delicious, "The Honey Bee" may be loved for Its witty lines, just as Goldsmith's comedy is loved for its wit. But this will never happen, as those who saw It last evening will be able to guess In three guesses. 
The story or the plot, what there Is of It, leaves one bewildered, though one finds out in the course of the evening that it is all about a lamp which refuses to burn until the last act. The plot could have been made Into a rather acceptable twenty-minute vaudeville sketch and been the stronger for it. But It Is the lines, reams and reams of satire, that came to the audience only as the fruit of painful listening, that will make the play live, if It survives long-enough for the public to arrive at the right perspective of the New Woman. 
Plot of Play. Told in Brief. 
Prof. Witherspoon Invented a lamp, but before he had It perfected his funds gave out, and he moved. Into the most remarkable building In Hoboken, N.J. In this wonderful building Is the meager flat to which the Witherspoons moved, on the top floor; the studio to which his wife moved when she deserted him, on the floor below; and a hall which served as the meeting place of the Hoboken Choral Society. To the Hoboken flat of the professor, who has Invented the lamp, comes Mrs. Billy Martin, who has more money than, anyone ever has outside of a play. She persuades beautiful Mrs. Witherspoon, cleverly played by Fanny Hartz, that the lamp Is her own Invention, not the professor's, and that It Is up to her to boost the cause of woman by deserting her husband and herself and perfecting the wonderful lamp with the funds which Mrs. Billy places at her disposal. 
It would be a fine piece of work but for a pair of Witherspoon children, portrayed by two wonderful child actors, Helen and Norris Millington, and a temporary lapse from sobriety with which the professor is impregnated at the hands of the German Socialist janitor of the Hoboken flat, who Is also the presiding genius of the Hoboken Choral Society. The wife cannot make the lamp go right, and the professor takes It up to his wifeless apartment and perfects it. The little Witherspoon boy has the whooping-cough, and the professor is no more adept with the child than his wife with the lamp. He puts the little fellow In the dumb waiter and lowers him to the wife In the flat below. Her success in caring for the little lad is equal to her failure with the lamp, and, of course, everybody is happy when It was disclosed that the lesson the play Is meant to convey Is that woman is more of a shining light In her own sphere of wifehood and motherhood than as a worker In the big, big, cruel world. 
Some of Play's Trifling Details 
There are such trifling divergent details as a titled suitor for the professor's wife's hand, after Mrs. Billy has convinced her that she must divorce her own husband, and much brave talk by this same Mrs. Billy about the cause of women; but, after all, the story Is told by the four quaint lines of verse that deck the program of the play. 
If nothing else, Messrs. Hutcheson Boyd and Rudolph Bunner have enriched the stage with the novelty of as grotesque a garret as ever Sol Smith Russell graced, and with a play In which each single character is a type so novel as to be almost fascinating. The Professor, played by Allan Pollock, is such a type as could only exist In a play, but still a delight when he announces that the worm has turned under the influence of the potent cheer of the Choral Society punch. Marie Chambers makes Mrs. Billy Martin the newest of the New Women, and delightful Fanny Hartz makes an inimitable picture of the wife who has more gumption than her husband and whose husband more than half realizes it. Those precious Millington children, as Jack and Jill Witherspoon, are a delight during every minute they are on the stage. Barbarossa Marks, the Teutonic Janitor with the language and convictions of an anarchist and the heart of a child, played by Eugene A. Hohenwart, and his gum-chewing daughter. Gertrude, with the coiffure of a shopgirl and keen discernment, acted by Marian Pullar, are just the rough foils needed for the more delicate characters of Cecil Witherspoon and his high-powered wife. 
There Is a count, played by Benjamin Kauser, who shrugs his shoulders, makes love, and kisses Mrs. Witherspoon on the back of her pleasing neck to perfection. And when I have mentioned the Mr. Smith of Bangor played by Roy Merrill, I have told you the names of every one of the nine people who make this play. I wish I could say that all the witty lines such as this: "Women are always angels when they leave us," are delivered with sufficient excellence of enunciation to be understood. They are not. The members of the cast all act well, but not one of them speaks as distinctly as they should, to do justice to this comedy of satire which Harrison Grey Fiske Is presenting to Washington this week. ~ JULIA MURDOCK
“The piece Is not a satire, neither does it point a moral.” ~ THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Despite ‘stinging’ reviews, The Honey Bee migrated to Rochester NY for a booking at the Lyceum starting November 20th, fulfilling its promise to play in New York!
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After this booking, The Honey Bee, not unlike the insect it is named after, disappeared. They say that once a bee stings, it dies. Such was the fate of Boyd and Bunner’s play. 
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thewritehag · 4 months
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I might be looking into going for a masters in folklore to research and write about Mormon Mysticism with the goal to publish. And, if I was going to, it would have nothing to do with an essay about Mormon Mysticism/Utah folklore that I may have read in the last few weeks.
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Not saying a thing.
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ne7cbbnglwinog · 1 year
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Gustavo Notella toma banho sensual Wacky czech girl opens up her tight slit to the peculiar Hot stepmom gives beautiful handjob in 69 position Gilf sucks on black cock virgin girl first sex even after she is bleeding Lingerie teen fucks bbc sexy fuck japanese girl figure (her name?) Mom fuck in forest his lover Lesbian Rubber Sex, Lena Love and Victoria Sweet Caught Working Out! He can’t resist! Doggystyle POV Sexercise
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intoguilt · 1 year
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mountain talk, neal hutcheson, 2003
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herpsandbirds · 3 months
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Alabama Waterdog aka Black Warrior Waterdog (Necturus alabamensis), family Proteidae, found only in streams in the Black Warrior River basin in Alabama, USA.
ENDANGERED.
Neotenic aquatic salamander.
Photograph by Kevin Hutcheson
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