Recently, CBS released the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "Elementary" episode 15 of season 3. The episode is entitled, "When Your Number's Up," and it turns out that we're going to see some very strange and interesting stuff take place when Holmes and Watson investigate a murderer that's been leaving cash on his victims, and more! In the new, 15th episode press release: Holmes and Watson are going to go inside the world of wrongful death compensation when a serial murderer leaves envelopes of cash on victims as a calling card. Press release number 2: Holmes and Watson will follow a blood trail into the world of wrongful death compensation when they investigate a series of murders in which the killer leaves envelopes of cash on the victims. Also, Holmes will make a generous gesture towards Watson as she suffers through the aftermath of a personal crisis. Alicia Witt guest stars as Dana Powell,...
- 2/12/2015
- by Chris
- OnTheFlix
That Poor Dream Directed by Jess Chayes Presented by The Assembly at the New Ohio Theatre 154 Christopher St., New York, NY October 4th - 26th, 2014
That Poor Dream was written and developed collectively by the members of the Assembly Theater Project, which describes its goals as creating performances that both "address the complexities of our ever-changing world" and ground artists and audience alike in “a profound sense of community;” the play transposes Charles Dickens's novel Great Expectations onto the social topography of current-day New York City. The play recontextualizes the social and economic rise and fall of the original, Dickensian Pip in a world of penthouse apartments and $1,000 omelets, a move that highlights that while the world may be "ever-changing," the class systems of Victorian England and the twenty-first century United States remain closer and more rigidly exploitative than we like to tell ourselves. Indeed, the Metro-North train that...
That Poor Dream was written and developed collectively by the members of the Assembly Theater Project, which describes its goals as creating performances that both "address the complexities of our ever-changing world" and ground artists and audience alike in “a profound sense of community;” the play transposes Charles Dickens's novel Great Expectations onto the social topography of current-day New York City. The play recontextualizes the social and economic rise and fall of the original, Dickensian Pip in a world of penthouse apartments and $1,000 omelets, a move that highlights that while the world may be "ever-changing," the class systems of Victorian England and the twenty-first century United States remain closer and more rigidly exploitative than we like to tell ourselves. Indeed, the Metro-North train that...
- 10/12/2014
- by Leah Richards
- www.culturecatch.com
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