Pin·terˈpin-tər
Pinter如何读
Pinter是什么意思
- n.平特
Pinter英英释义
- English dramatist whose plays are characterized by silences and the use of inaction (born in 1930)
Pinter 例句
1 A canny interpreter of Harold Pinter's menacing enigmas, Duncan channeled the traumatic mystery of his play "Ashes to Ashes" with harrowing intensity.
2 Reflecting on his two primary theatrical sources, Shakespeare and Pinter, Mr. Holm said that they were equally difficult to perform.
3 Mr. Johnson, the “Cage” director, said that he saw “Pinter’s deep intelligence, lack of affect and rigorous craftsmanship in Doug,” qualities that he believes are part of his Albin.
4 Written two decades apart, and in very different emotional keys, they are not as tightly of a piece or as teasingly subtle as top-drawer Pinter can be.
5 It’s as if someone were filling in the blanks in a Pinter play.
6 In both plays, they honor what's known and unknown in Pinter's singular vision.
7 Appearances are important to Ben, after all, and, this being a Pinter play, so are rituals.
8 Here it becomes so piercingly clear that you find yourself regarding it as a sort of Rosetta stone to Pinter’s body of work.
9 Toilet paper Dynamite Anesthesia A prototype ebook When Harold Pinter won the prize in 2005, which writing method did he reveal in his acceptance speech?
10 But if I learned anything it was that theatre is at its best when, as with Phaedra, Beckett and Pinter, it offers real passion and verbal power.
11 And it becomes clearer than ever that the primal impulse to wield power, and its most savage manifestations, was always Pinter’s subject.
12 They were not uneasy bedfellows, Coward and Pinter.
13 But when he reads Pinter’s poems, as well as the odd prose piece, you feel the playwright’s presence.
14 Mr. Mamet, who had a brief stint selling real estate in Chicago, dedicated “Glengarry” to the British dramatist Harold Pinter, whose plays are ferocious battles where the weapons of choice are cryptic statements.
15 He appeared in plays by William Shakespeare and Harold Pinter and in early TV programs such as “Studio One in Hollywood.”
16 “What we’re doing a lot of the time is following the music of it,” said Mr. Hodge, who worked with Pinter and has directed many of his plays.
17 Lady Antonia Fraser, Harold Pinter's widow and a fellow judge, said the award "would have meant a great deal" to her late husband.
18 "You and I, the characters which grow on a page, most of the time we're inexpressive, giving little away, unreliable, elusive, obstructive, unwilling," Pinter once noted.
19 After Beckett came Harold Pinter, with whom Hall set off another revolution in dramatic possibility with “The Homecoming” in 1965.
20 Pinter’s plays throw into relief the territorial nature of human beings — the way reality, both present and past, is a turf war in which the will to dominate supersedes all other considerations.