Broadway s favorite bad guy celebrates Shakespeare s villains in All the Devils Are Here
Thomas Floyd, The Washington Post
March 4, 2021
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1of3Patrick Page in All the Devils Are Here, his one-man show celebrating Shakespeare s villains.Shakespeare Theatre CompanyShow MoreShow Less
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When Patrick Page was 8, the future actor and playwright regularly dozed off to an unconventional bedtime story: an audio version of Laurence Olivier s film adaptation of Richard III.
Considering the play is one of William Shakespeare s grisliest - complete with a double dose of nepoticide - Page acknowledges the obvious: When you re 8 years old, it seems like maybe an odd thing to be listening to as you go to sleep.
K-pop sensation BTS, whose catchy, upbeat songs have won legions of fans around the world, have scooped the 2020 Global Recording Artist of the Year Award from IFPI, the recorded music industry representative body said on Thursday.
Threats of a March 4 attack create disruptions but little trouble. Researchers say police overreacted.
Craig Timberg and Drew Harwell, The Washington Post
March 4, 2021
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As Congress canceled a hearing amid reported threats to the Capitol on Thursday, researchers who had warned of trouble ahead of the Jan. 6 siege found themselves scratching their heads. If something was brewing, they said, it was much smaller, quieter and less obviously violent than what they had reported two months ago - when they had struggled to get authorities to take their warnings seriously.
That contrast was even more startling as Thursday proceeded with few signs of trouble, and a sunny Washington D.C. eased into spring-like bloom. The Capitol grounds remained quiet behind black metal fences guarded by heavily armed troops.
How Whanganui s Tasman Tanning plans to improve environmental record
4 Mar, 2021 04:00 PM
2 minutes to read
Tasman Tanning is continuing to work on improving its trade waste. Photo / Bevan Conley
Laurel Stowell is a reporter for the Whanganui Chroniclelaurel.stowell@whanganuichronicle.co.nzWhangaChron
Whanganui s Tasman Tanning expects to drop its effluent waste and chromium levels to significantly below the district council s allowable limits by the end of the year, chief executive Neville Dyer says. The tannery breached its wastewater consents 570 times in the last year, it was reported in January.
Tasman Tanning contributes only 5 per cent of the water treated by the Whanganui wastewater treatment plant - but 25 per cent of the solids.