Dear God,
Hi, it's Dan again. I have something
that I need to confess. No, No,
not that. The other thing. I didn't
swear to not like it. I swore that I probably
wouldn't like it. I mean, come
on. It's supposed to be about a bunch
of old and young women talking
about, stuff. You know, personal
WOMAN stuff. It's called the Vagina
Monologues. With a V.
V-Day Commentary:
The reason for the Monologues
Staff Writer
In 1998 a woman by the name of Eve Ensler, joined by a group of women in New York, gave birth to an incredible global movement—the culmination of Ensler’s Obie-Award winning play, The Vagina Monologues.
A whole different outlook:
Vagina Monologues get two thumbs up
Staff Writer
This play was absolutely captivating. From the moment the cast stepped onto the stage the audience was riveted. They laughed, they cried, they gasped, and they held their breath. The actors all did well; there wasn’t a poor performance of any of the monologues. Each had their own powerful presence.
Review: 'Twilight' needs more flash The kids are burning for "Twilight," but will the book's fans mind that the effects are decidedly low-tech, that there are no famous faces and that the whole show hasn't been transplanted to glossy Los Angeles? I doubt it. The antics of a dog who confuses his day job as the canine superhero in a TV action series with his real-life skills is plenty high-concept. But in "Bolt" -- a blithe, digitally animated (and, in select theaters, 3-D) doggy comedy as zippy as its name -- the fanciful premise only paws the surface of what's going on as we sit in the dark wearing plastic 3-D glasses. Why are some people amazingly successful -- and other people with the same intelligence or abilities just part of the crowd? Lewd telephone calls by two British comedians to a well-known actor, which were aired in a BBC radio program, were "grossly offensive" and should never have taken place, the public broadcaster's watchdog group said Friday. The music of Philadelphia International Records sounds effortless, and no wonder: It was about family, say founders Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff. That's what you hear on all those hits by the O'Jays, Delfonics, Stylistics and others. |

