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| So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire Roseanne! | |
| Posted by: allineedisthegirl 02:58 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
| In reply to: Extension for Three Tall Women? - Thom915 02:06 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
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| I wouldn't mind seeing Estelle Parsons play "A" to Metcalf's "B." nm | |
| Posted by: kieran 12:00 am EDT 05/30/18 | |
| In reply to: So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire Roseanne! - allineedisthegirl 02:58 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
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| re: So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire another great actress | |
| Last Edit: PlayWiz 05:56 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
| Posted by: PlayWiz 05:53 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
| In reply to: So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire Roseanne! - allineedisthegirl 02:58 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
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| like Glenn Close or Meryl Streep, though thus far I don't think those ladies have ever done a replacement gig. If they want to do a great role, it wouldn't diminish their standing in the industry to do it, but that's sometimes how big stars think. Actually, two-Time Oscar winner Sally Field did a replacement gig in "The Goat" to her great credit. Come on, Barbra! (in our dreams) :) | |
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| re: So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire another great actress | |
| Posted by: BruceinIthaca 06:21 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
| In reply to: re: So if Glenda Jackson doesn't want to extend they could hire another great actress - PlayWiz 05:53 pm EDT 05/29/18 | |
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| Miss Stanwyck has been dead for some time (I know, I know different spelling, but surely Missy (as she was affectionately known to her crews and co-workers) would have made a fabulous A--and, as much as I admire Ms. Streisand, I do not see Albee's A as in her wheelhouse). Now, a tall woman I could also imagine would be Ellen Burstyn! My favorite (and only) Burstyn story is when I attended "The Testament of Mary" and I was in line to go onto the set before the show and two middle-aged women ahead of me whispered to each other, "WHo's that? She's somebody!" "She looks like Dorothy McGuire!" Then, before I could say anything, one turned to the tall woman approaching us and said, "Are you Dorothy McGuire," to which the women said, "No! Isn't she dead?" I said, "She has been for some time, but you are very much alive, Miss Burtyn." She smiled and proceeded on her way. Three weeks later, we were seated in the same row at "The Trip to Bountiful." So I can say Ellen and I are theatre buddies. | |
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