. The full quote is: "We keep to our usual stuff, more or less, only inside out. We do on stage the things that are supposed to happen off. Which is a kind of integrity, if you look on every exit being an entrance somewhere else." In this scene, it is revealed that the players' performance is little more than a front for prostitution. The exits into which they're entering are, well, exactly what you think they are. Now, on with the listings!
Results tagged “throughapril”
. It is not: “Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him well!” No no no. The verse doesn’t even work there. The monologue instead begins: “Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio…” (You can find the rest of the monologue by performing a simple Google search for it. This was our “I feel lucky” hit.) Now, on with the listings!
The fact that this week’s headline quotes lyrics to a song from the musical episode of the same name and then sang the song for our friend when he said he’d never heard it. Now, on with the listings!
This week, we've got another theatre quote from Shakespeare because, as it turns out, the Bard was totally meta. This one is from Hamlet, and it comes at the end of a very long monologue (did you know that Hamlet is the talkiest of all Shakespeare's characters?) during which Hamlet schemes to have his uncle admit to killing his father. The entirety of the well-known quote, which isn't even a complete sentence, is: "...the play's the thing/ Wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king." Now, on with the listings!
We can't help it. Whenever anyone so much as mentions , we get "Defying Gravity" stuck in our heads. Or "Popular." Now, on with the listings!
This week's quote comes directly from Lord Byron himself, as we honor him with the first listing of the week. Although possessing of a clubfoot and a thing for his half-sister, Byron still managed to be England's most eligible bachelor of his day. Looking at the portrait on the left, we can kinda see it. Now, on with the listings!
