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My First Ballet Experience
This is where you can discuss your homework, family, just about anything, make strange sounds and otherwise discuss things which are really not related to the Lancer-series. Yes that means you can discuss other games.
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tonight was the night that me and bev were supposed to go see the nutcracker together downtown in queen elizabeth theatre. the day was just a total mess. heavy heavy hail and bev being shoeless and time being agaisnt us were really making this day seem bad...but everything always worked out well in the end. well...except for the ****ING PIECE OF **** PARKING SLIP MACHINE which ate my 7 bucks. -_- argh. anyways....yeah the ballet itself was ok. "it was an experience." about 30% of the ballet was story telling...the rest was all dancing. all those men in tights didnt do a thing for me...sorry. and the women didnt wear anything tight so that kinda sucks, too. (those guys stuff their crotches, i swear to god, they do. who the heck has balls the size of apples for testicles??) but yah, overall i did have a nice time there but mainly cuz i got to be with my beverly. oh yah, then i went home and ate a ****load of chicken.
The you should have seen 'La Traviata'...............I'm not much of a cultural person, b/c most cultures are grown in the fridge And those ballette-dancers are queer anyway, so don't feel threathened. The title itself sounds like it hurts like he**.
Norse Player
Edited by - Norse Player on 27-12-2003 10:25:26
Norse Player
Edited by - Norse Player on 27-12-2003 10:25:26
I always wondered how that Christmas tradition got started... in Russa. Every year, one of the NY ballet companies puts on the Nutcracker. Here, Georges Balanchine brought the tradition over from Russia, by way of France.
For kids, girls especially but boys too, the ballet is quite magical.
@EB: I agree, stuffed. I think they're called cod pieces. Not sure because the originals were worn on the outside.
For kids, girls especially but boys too, the ballet is quite magical.
@EB: I agree, stuffed. I think they're called cod pieces. Not sure because the originals were worn on the outside.
I don't get the shoe-less thing. Does she make a habit of walking around barefoot, or did she just misplace her shoes? perhaps they were stolen?
or perhaps, and as I suspect more likely now that you have embarked upon the journey to learn the mysterious ways of women, you discovered that she simply "didn't have any shoes she could actually wear?" i.e. my wife actually has 37 pairs of shoes, but only considers 2 pairs actually worth wearing for any "special" occasions; based upon the empirical rule that out of a different pair for every day, it takes 2 weeks to find a pair which are actually "wearable" (which does not include the 7" heel thigh-high leather ones I make her wear on Saturday nights)
ah poor EB. so much in love, so much to learn. Ballet's just the thin end of the wedge, I'm afraid and what's more, I predict our friend Arcon going the same way within the next 12 months, it's inevitable.
My wife long ago gave up trying to include me in her cultural pursuits besides she never suggests going to see Ibsen or anything actually interesting, it was always lame rot like Romeo & Juliet in the park or Gilbert & bl**dy Sullivan.
<grumble grumble> ok rant over.
or perhaps, and as I suspect more likely now that you have embarked upon the journey to learn the mysterious ways of women, you discovered that she simply "didn't have any shoes she could actually wear?" i.e. my wife actually has 37 pairs of shoes, but only considers 2 pairs actually worth wearing for any "special" occasions; based upon the empirical rule that out of a different pair for every day, it takes 2 weeks to find a pair which are actually "wearable" (which does not include the 7" heel thigh-high leather ones I make her wear on Saturday nights)
ah poor EB. so much in love, so much to learn. Ballet's just the thin end of the wedge, I'm afraid and what's more, I predict our friend Arcon going the same way within the next 12 months, it's inevitable.
My wife long ago gave up trying to include me in her cultural pursuits besides she never suggests going to see Ibsen or anything actually interesting, it was always lame rot like Romeo & Juliet in the park or Gilbert & bl**dy Sullivan.
<grumble grumble> ok rant over.
I had a friend who always said the guys should wear the tutus, not the ballerinas.
Personally, I cannot stand ballet! I like opera, but seeing people on tippie toes walzing around to music is not my thing. Women with leg muscles like weight lifters isn't either!
Jose Chavez: "Trent! It's good to see my kind of scum."
Personally, I cannot stand ballet! I like opera, but seeing people on tippie toes walzing around to music is not my thing. Women with leg muscles like weight lifters isn't either!
Jose Chavez: "Trent! It's good to see my kind of scum."
My one and only balet experience was when I was 10 and they had a male and female duo come to our school and do a demo of a balet for us. It was especially memorable as at sometime during the performance all us kids noticed that the woman's pink leotard had a brown stain in the rear. And everytime she turned around we burst out laughing.
Sir S
Sir S
SnS aged 10 *squints really really hard* Uh. Cannot picture it so to speak but what's so hard about imagining it?
I get a mental picture of a kid watching the events and trying to come up with whatever kids level of olde English he knew at that point to describe the goings on....probably involving a lot of "yoiks" and "halloos" or something.
I get a mental picture of a kid watching the events and trying to come up with whatever kids level of olde English he knew at that point to describe the goings on....probably involving a lot of "yoiks" and "halloos" or something.
@Indy with cc to Taw, how many times do I have to say it? I never wrote Olde English before until I came to this site. If you go back and read the progression of my Olde English from Uba to Reynet, in just those four plays, you'll see how my form and style improved as I studied up on it. I've always like Shakespeare, but my first reading of it, probably was at age 15.
So what was I like when I was 10 ... other than the whole Olde English thing ... I was shorter.
Sir S
So what was I like when I was 10 ... other than the whole Olde English thing ... I was shorter.
Sir S
15 posts
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