22 Things To Do in Real Life and Virtually This Week in Denver – 303 Magazine
Posted: December 28, 2020 at 1:52 pm
Denver has some marvelous events lined up this week. Kick it off by taking a deep breath at a Dig Deep Online Power Yoga Class and end it relaxing at We Begin Again: Yoga and Bullet Journaling. Wherever the week takes you, make sure to take a glance at this roundup of events happening in Denver.
Reminder, masks and social distancing are mandatory at any of these in-person events. Also due tocurrent restrictions, they can only be attended with members of your household.
Photo Courtesy of Urban Sanctuary Denver on Facebook
When: December 28, 9 10 a.m.
Where: Online
Cost: Varying prices register here
The Lowdown: Urban Sanctuary Denver helps you let go of that holiday stress with Dig Deep Online Power Yoga Class. You can stretch out on a mat and breath deeply to relieve your body of lingering tension.
Photo Courtesy of 9NEWS Parade of Lights on Facebook
When:December 28 31
Where:Starts at Denver Pavillions, 500 16th St. Mall, Denver
Cost:Free admission
The Lowdown:The annual9News Parade of Lights is back for the holiday season. This year the parade is a multi-day event with floats stationed all around downtown Denver starting at Denver Pavillions and ending at Denver Union Station. You can experience an amazing array of lights and stay socially distanced.
Photo Courtesy of Denvers Dangerous Theatre on Facebook
When:December 28 31
Where:Online
Cost:$10 $25 get tickets here
The Lowdown:Get a giggle on during Drunk Storytime: Drink-Along-Comedy show. You can choose from stories such as Dr. SeussOobleck, Cat & Sneetches,Gilligans Island Whats in the Box?andMission to Zolbott, A tale about the misfit crew of the Conundrum and a disco loving drag queen alien. The adults-only streaming features drinking cues with the narrator Caroline for a boozy night of laughs.
Photo Courtesy of Christmas in Color on official website
When: December 28 January 3
Where:Bandimere Speedway, 3051 S. Rooney Rd., Morrison
Cost:$30 per vehicle get ticketshere
The Lowdown: Step into the holidays during Christmas in Color Morrison. You can drive through 1.5 million glittering lights spun around Bandimere Speedway with the sound of holiday tunes in the background to set the mood for the perfect socially distant holiday activity.
Photo Courtesy of Denver Zoo on Facebook
When: December 29 January 1
Where: Online
Cost: Free admission
The Lowdown: Have a chance at snagging free tickets to the Denver Zoo during a Free Ticket Lottery. Denver Zoo is releasing 125 free ticket vouchers for select dates. You can win up to five tickets during the auction transactions.
Photo Courtesy of Eventbrite on Facebook
When: December 29, 6:30 7:30 p.m.
Where: Online
Cost: Bids start at $1 here
The Lowdown: Spectra Art Space hosts a Live Art Auction. You can purchase works from artist Kayla Lees during the virtual auction. A portion of the proceeds will benefit Spectra Art Space and its programs.
Photo Courtesy of Eventbrite on Facebook
When:December 30, 6 7 p.m.
Where:Online
Cost:Free $17.50 get tickets here
The Lowdown:Get your crafting skills warmed up for Laugh Your Craft Off. You can take part in a clay wall hanging making workshop with instruction from artist Melissa Piazza and comedic commentary from comedian Hannah Jones as you create during the virtual session.
Photo Courtesy of Denver Sushi House on Facebook
When:December 30, 6:30 7:30 p.m.
Where:Online
Cost:$80 get tickets here
The Lowdown:Denver Sushi House partners with Colorado Sake Co. for a Dim Sum Folding Date Night. You can learn how to create four different types of dim sum at home with a live stream guided by chef Taylor while imbibing on sake throughout the evening.
Bassnectar on 12/30/2019. Photo by Brandon Johnson.
When: December 30 31
Where: Online
Cost: Free
The Lowdown: Get your party on during a Decadence Colorado Festival live stream. You can dance all night in the safety of your own home while jamming to some poppin music.
When: December 30, 12 5 p.m.
Where:Prismajic, 2219 E. 21st Ave., Denver
Cost:$14 get ticketshere
The Lowdown:Dive into the fantastical world of Natura Obscura duringShiki Dreams. The 1,500 square-foot interactive exhibition allows you to explore the magical home of the yeti named Shiki with otherworldly experiences, sounds and more.
Photo Courtesy Childrens Future International on Facebook
When: December 30, 6 7:30 p.m.
Where: Online
Cost: Free register here
The Lowdown: Bear Creek Distillery teams up with Childrens Future International for a Virtual Fundraiser and Cocktail Making Class. You can learn how to create three different cocktails with the guidances of Bear Creek Distillery mixologists raise funds for Childrens Future International in the Zoom event.
Photo Courtesy of Kadampa Meditation Center Colorado on Facebook
When:December 31, 7:30 9 p.m.
Where:Online
Cost:Free $21 register here
The Lowdown: Kadampa Meditation Center Colorado keeps you centered going into the New Year with an Alternative New Years Eve Event & Fundraiser. You can hear a discussion about compassion and help support the center into 2021.
READ: 25+ New Years Eve Dinners To Ring in 2021
Photo Courtesy of Midnight Tyrannosaurus on Facebook
When: December 31 5 p.m. 3 a.m.
Where: Online
Cost: Free admission
The Lowdown: Get your body moving during the Midnight Tyrannosaurus and Friends NYE. You can rock out to beats from Algo, Mother Lotus, Strangr and more throughout the evening on Twitch.
Photo Courtesy of Wildermiss on Facebook
When: December 31, 4 9 p.m.
Where: Number Thirty Eight, 3560 Chestnut Pl., Denver
Cost: $50 $420 get tickets here
The Lowdown: Number Thirty Eight hosts a New Years Eve celebration with an outdoor performance from Wildermiss and Brianna Straut. You can party out the year while rockin to the socially distanced show.
Photo Courtesy of Itchy-O on Facebook
When: December 31, 10 p.m.
Where: Online
Cost: Varying prices check here
The Lowdown: Itchy-O teams up with Alamo Drafthouse Cinemas and Legion M to present the Sypherlot NYE Uncaged Interactive Experience. You can participate in an interactive musical experience with a virtual recreation of the Austin-based Lamar theater in a parking lot while maintaining social distancing safety measures.
Photo Courtesy of Factotum Brewhouse
When:January 1, 12 8 p.m.
Where:Factotum Brewhouse, 3845 Lipan St., Denver
Cost:Free registerhere
The Lowdown:Factotum Brewhouse hosts its Sixth Annual New Years Day Tamales and Brewskis. You can celebrate the start of 2021 with a take-home kit filled with eight tamales and a four-pack of Factotum brews. Make sure to order by December 28 at 11:59 p.m
Photo courtesy of Denver Union Station.
When: January 1 3, 5 p.m. 10 p.m.
Where:Union Station, 1701 Wynkoop Street, Denver
Cost:Free admission
The Lowdown: Denvers Union Station hosts its Merry & Bright Lights. The light show features works from local artists projected onto the exterior of Union Station. Artists such as Estee Fox, Maya Dite-Shepard and WAVEFORM.exp. will have their works projected onto the building. For more information check here.
Photo Courtesy of CORE New Art Space
When: January 1 17
Where: CORE New Art Space, 6851 W. Colfax Ave., Lakewood
Cost: Free admission
The Lowdown: CORE New Art Space hosts a CORE All Member Show. You can experience a myriad of art from realism to ceramics to fiber arts and more. Works that are featured within the show will be available for purchase as well as prints and small pieces.
Photo Courtesy of Eventbrite on Facebook
When: January 2, 3 5 p.m.
Where: Larimer Lounge, 2721 Larimer St., Denver
Cost: $10 $40 get tickets here
The Lowdown: Larimer Lounge hosts Arily Michele of Viewfinders. Michele is singer and songwriter with pop vibe similar to Lana Del Rey or Stevie Nicks. You can watch her perform and stay socially distanced within the lounge.
Photo Courtesy of Cleo Parker Robinson Dance
When: January 2
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22 Things To Do in Real Life and Virtually This Week in Denver - 303 Magazine
Theater groups present plays virtually to stay connected to audiences – Uniontown Herald Standard
Posted: at 1:51 pm
Ghost lights are kept burning in many theaters when they are empty. A ghost light is a single bulb that remains illuminated so, in theater lore, vexatious spirits are kept at bay when actors are not treading the boards and spectators are not taking in their work.
As the coronavirus pandemic has raged for the last nine months, ghost lights have been switched on around the clock in theaters around the world as in-person productions have been shut down, with no clear indication when they will resume.
Marya Sea Kaminski, artistic director for Pittsburgh Public Theater, explained there have been times she has walked through the empty expanse of the Pittsburgh Public Theaters auditorium and felt wistful about the productions that have gone unstaged there.
But even if there is nothing that quite matches the immediacy and spontaneity of live theater, Kaminski is one of many theater professionals who has been trying to devise ways to keep actors and crews working and audiences interested when the playhouse doors have remained locked.
To do that, theyve been turning to the internet, staging readings of new and classic plays or even recording fully-staged productions with actors in different locations.
Its not quite film or TV, and its not quite theater, but a hybrid that lands somewhere in between.
Its a salvation to be able to do this, both for the artists and audiences who are hoping for some sort of connection, Kaminski said.
Small theater groups, like Little Lake Theatre outside Canonsburg, have been giving it a whirl, as have internationally-renowed companies like the Old Vic in London. Others have been dusting off performances from yesteryear that survive on video or film and putting them online.
Were on a steep learning curve to find out what works, said Steven Breese, artistic director of the Pittsburgh Playhouse at Point Park University.
Some companies have opted for the simplicity of using the video conferencing platform Zoom, or turning to YouTube. Others have turned to sites like On Stage Streaming, Broadway on Demand and ShowTix4U.
Even in the best of times, live theater is constrained by money, space and available talent, and that holds when the audience is wearing sweatpants and watching on their laptops. Actors practicing social distancing or not even performing in the same room at the same time limits the types of plays that can be chosen presenting a sprawling musical like, Miss Saigon or The Phantom of the Opera would be tough on Zoom. Instead, intimate, more small-scale productions have largely been the order of the day.
As Halloween approached this fall, many theater groups presented readings of works by Edgar Allan Poe. With Christmas looming, some companies will be dipping into their Santa sack to extend some holiday cheer. Little Lake Theatre, for example, will be presenting A Very Little Lake Christmas at 7 p.m. Dec. 11 on Zoom. It will bring to life favorite holiday stories and memories submitted by patrons.
We thought sharing family stories would be a lovely way to celebrate, according to Jena Oberg, Little Lakes artistic director.
Once it became clear the remainder of Little Lakes 2020 season would have to be scrapped because of the pandemic, Oberg and the Little Lake staff starting pulling together plans for the virtual productions. Almost everything is done virtually, she said, from read-throughs to rehearsals.
This has also presented challenges getting props and costumes to actors, since no one is ever in the same space. Little Lake has had to create duplicates of many props so it can appear actors are passing the same object back and forth. As a director, Oberg also has to determine what lighting levels are best in each actors home to support a plays visual presentation.
As a director, I have had to find new and inventive ways of focusing a scene and directing where we want the audiences eye to go, Oberg said. On stage, you can do this through movement, lighting, other characters focus. But on Zoom, it becomes much more difficult. We have been discovering ways to use the Zoom borders and movement within the Zoom frame to accomplish this.
Helping an audience understand what is happening as a play unfolds is another challenge Oberg has had to confront. When Little Lake presented the George Bernard Shaw comedy Arms and the Man this month, an actor was assigned to read the stage directions, like the floating voice of Shaw, she explained.
Pittsburgh Public Theater started presenting online productions almost as soon as the shutdowns started in March. There have been readings of new plays this fall, and in the first part of 2021, fresh adaptations of The Three Musketeers, Romeo and Juliet, and Cyrano de Bergerac are scheduled. If theres an upside to presenting plays online, its allowed her to make more adventurous choices, Kaminski said.
Its given me a little more bandwidth, she said.
Kaminski pointed out theater companies have had to confront knotty issues of licensing when choosing plays to present online, since streaming rights are not attached to some of them.
Its taken a while to figure out licensing, Kaminski said. That has absolutely been a factor.
In December, the Pittsburgh Playhouse presented Picasso at the Lapin Agile by comedian and musician Steve Martin, and the holiday chestnut Its a Wonderful Life was done in the style of a vintage radio play. Also on tap was the musical Ordinary Days, which, according to the description provided by the Playhouse, brings theater and film together in a new multimedia hybrid experience. The Pittsburgh Playhouse has presented both plays and dance productions online, and its program has been quite robust since the start of the pandemic, Breese said.
I dont know of anyone trying to do exactly what were trying to do, he added. Weve been able to do things that other theater companies are not doing.
Putting resources into the online presentation isnt just a way for the Pittsburgh Playhouse to soldier through the pandemic, according to Breese, but also an investment in the future.
We need to be able to do this very well, he said.
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Theater groups present plays virtually to stay connected to audiences - Uniontown Herald Standard
Politicians and statesmen . . . and their reading habits – The Financial Express
Posted: at 1:51 pm
Syed Badrul Ahsan | Published: December 28, 2020 20:43:10
Reading the memoirs of Andrei Gromyko does something cheering to the soul. In the first place, it takes one back to the rather energising days that symbolised the Soviet Union before its collapse in the Gorbachev era. In the second, it reinforces the idea of how statesmen, especially communists, happened to be voracious readers, and right from their young days. Gromyko, a diplomat who served for decades as his country's foreign minister, is quite frank about the way his mother inspired him into reading books. The rich results of his wide reading are evident in this work, the English translation of it giving it the title 'Memories'. His sweeping view of the history of his times is a boon for anyone curious about the ramifications of the Second World War and the Cold War that was soon to come in its wake.
Reading habits in statesmen in our times have consistently been reflected in the many ways in which they have conducted themselves in carrying out their public responsibilities. When Charles de Gaulle was once asked about the biggest influence on his life and career, he wasted no time in coming up with a telling response. 'Do not ask a lion how many lambs it has eaten', he said. 'I have been reading books all my life.' The statement was blunt, but it made its mark. We now know of the sheer intellectual prowess which guided de Gaulle in his administration of France even as he dealt with the world, on his terms.
Joseph Stalin, we understand through studies of the man, read profusely and could copiously quote Shakespeare and Goethe, among so many other writers, at dinner with his party colleagues. There was cruelty in him, to be sure, as evident from the innumerable purges of his real and imagined enemies. But that did not detract him from his fascination for books. Ironically, it was some powerful writers and poets he went after, individuals like Osip Mandelstam and Anna Akhmatova. But that did not interfere with his reading of history and the classics. Adolf Hitler was no statesman, of course. But the mass murderer in him too spent a considerable time reading, a truth borne out by the huge personal library he built at home.
Politicians are often ruthless, depending on where they happen to be at given points of history. Mao Zedong, without whom the history of China would be different from what we know of it today, wrote poetry of a defining sort. 'Beauty lies at the top of the mountain', he declaimed. His study was piled chaotically with books, all of which he had read and the results of which reading came through in his interaction with foreign leaders. Richard Nixon, himself an avid reader and writer of informed articles and books, especially on foreign policy, was suitably impressed when he met the Chairman in February 1972 in Beijing. And there was too Zhou En-lai, the urbane scholar whose association with reading constantly manifested itself in his interaction with visitors humble and great, local and foreign.
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was an ardent reader, as his library at his Dhanmondi home has shown. He admired Bertand Russell and George Bernard Shaw. On his last night alive, he was reportedly reading the latter's 'Man and Superman'. His readings of Abraham Lincoln and Winston Churchill were detailed. He was also conversant with Dostoyevsky's 'Crime and Punishment.' In an earlier time, Jawaharlal Nehru epitomised political leadership which rested on scholarship. His letters to his daughter, coupled with his authorship of 'The Discovery of India', are instances of the wide reading which went into the development of his personality as a political figure. Gandhi remains another example of a politician whose individuality was enriched by a lifelong habit of reading and, yes, writing.
In the United States, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was a fast reader, rushing through a thousand words a minute. Books were among his fascination, but he was to be clearly upstaged here by two future presidents. Bill Clinton has had the reputation of reading five books at a time. Barack Obama's brilliance, and expansive reading habits, have shone through the books he has written (Audacity of Hope, Dreams From My Father and A Promised Land). In the 19th century, Abraham Lincoln's reading clearly shaped him for the leadership he was to provide his country during the Civil War. He simply stretched out on the floor, leaning against an upturned chair (which irritated his wife to no end) and read on.
Tajuddin Ahmad was a profound reader, proof of which was to be found in his political and intellectual discourse throughout his career. His diaries in his youthful days between the late 1940s and early 1950s are even today pointers to the remarkable Bengali nationalist he was to become. Francois Mitterrand, a voracious reader, would slip away from the Elysee in his presidential days and go off to the many bookshops in Paris looking for copies of rare books to add to his collection. He enjoyed power; and he enjoyed reading more. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, for all his arrogance and insensitivity to people around him, was a good reader. His library at his Clifton home in Karachi is rich, with a good number of works on Napoleon Bonaparte, a man he admired hugely. Harold Wilson and Michael Foot in Britain were fond of books, losing themselves in reading all their lives.
Politicians generally remain busy dealing with statecraft. But administering nations or dealing with people is infinitely lifted to a higher plane when politicians read, when they make it a habit to read. Intense, focused reading transforms politicians into statesmen, provided they can prevent hubris from infecting the statesmanship with its poison.
Reading teaches humility. Think here of India's poet-politician Atal Behari Vajpayee.
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Politicians and statesmen . . . and their reading habits - The Financial Express
My Bond girl should have turned down sex with 007, says Gemma Arterton – The Sun
Posted: at 1:51 pm
SHE gained an army of fans after playing sexy Bond girl Strawberry Fields but Gemma Arterton says she prefers her latest role wearing a nuns habit.
Gemma also had to have part of her hair shaved off for the role in tonights hotly-anticipated BBC One drama Black Narcissus.
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The three-part series is about a 1930s religious group that sets up a school and hospital in an abandoned palace in the Tibetan Himalayas.
Gemma said: I have this weird hairstyle. I was very grateful that I didnt have to shave it all off but I did bits and bobs.
Im still growing it out actually, Ive got short bits all over the place. I loved wearing the habit, though.
The role of a nun couldnt be further from MI6 agent Strawberry in 2008s Quantum Of Solace, starring Daniel Craig as 007.
Despite beating 1,500 other hopefuls to become a Bond girl, Gemma has admitted shes had criticism for the role.
She has said: At the beginning of my career, I was poor as a church mouse and I was happy just to be able to work and earn a living.
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I still get criticism for accepting Quantum Of Solace, but I was 21, I had a student loan, and you, know, it was a Bond film.
But as I got older I realised there was so much wrong with Bond women. Strawberry should have just said no, really, and worn flat shoes.
Gemma grew up on a council estate in Gravesend, Kent, with her mum, Sally-Anne, who runs a cleaning business, and her younger sister Hannah.
Her parents split when she was very young but Gemma is close to her dad Barry, a welder.
She won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art at 18 and has gone on to star in St. Trinians, Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time, Clash Of The Titans, Kingsman: The Secret Service and BBCs Tess Of The DUrbervilles.
Gemmas extraordinary success means she can now pick and choose new roles.
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In one interview, she said: Im at a point in my life where if Im going to take on a project, it has to be really something great. I dont simply want to work for the sake of working.
In Black Narcissus she plays Sister Clodagh, who leads a group of nuns to their new home on a remote mountain top in Nepal, only to discover it is a former harem filled with tragedy and dark secrets.
The psychological drama, based on the 1939 novel of the same name by Rumer Godden, was filmed before the pandemic.
Production was split between Pinewood Studios in London and three weeks in the Himalayas, ending two days before Christmas last year.
She said: Im so proud of the work we did on this. We put our hearts and souls into it.
We all went to Nepal and it took us three flights and a week to get there. We were in the middle of nowhere in the Himalayan mountains and it was a really special bonding experience.
These things dont come along very often at all. There was something really magical about this and the shoot itself for me was one of the highlights of my career so far.
However, filming in a village 8,900ft above sea level doesnt come without its disadvantages.
As well as freezing temperatures, Gemma says the high altitude made them all hyperactive one night.
She said: We were well looked after, we had blankets, but its extreme. The temperatures drop dramatically at night and you are out there on your own, the altitude gets you.
"I remember we had a party one night and we were all dancing outside and none of us had had anything to drink. But we all got really hyperactive because the air is so thin, you just get really dizzy.
Despite its remote location, the cast and crew were delighted to find a familiar-sounding Yac Donalds restaurant, which serves happy meals made from the local long-haired cow called a yak.
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Gemma said: You have Yac burger and Yac cheese and its quite well known, this place. People come from all over the world to go there. We got quite excited about it.
Black Narcissus is the latest in a string of gritty parts for Gemma.
In 2009 noir thriller The Disappearance Of Alice Creed, she played a kidnap victim, who was handcuffed, gagged and tied to a bed for much of the film.
There was 2017s largely improvised drama The Escape, about a bored and desperate housewife, and in this years Summerland, her character Alice is a recluse whose life is dramatically changed by a child war evacuee.
As well as avoiding decorative roles, Gemma wants to help bring about a shift in Hollywood.
She set up her own production company Rebel Park in 2013, focused mainly on female talent, and has been a vocal campaigner for equal pay in the film industry.
She has said: I have my own production company which is all about giving women an opportunity in film.
Its [the industry] getting better but it definitely isnt there yet.
I struggled with that a little bit at first but Ill keep making suggestions to people.
The down-to-earth, straight-talking star says she has learned from the mistakes she made in her early career and intends to act for as long as she can.
Gemma said: I look forward to getting older and wiser. My role model is my grandfather. Even in his mid-nineties he gave the impression of being in his twenties.
He was very sharp-minded and looked like Clark Gable with his moustache and hair. He was still sexy a really hot guy. I secretly hope Ive inherited his genes.
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She has certainly inherited her familys grafter work ethic.
Gemmas latest blockbuster, The Kings Man, is directed by Matthew Vaughn and due for release in February.
She is also voicing two animated movies and is set to star alongside Colin Firth in 1930s theatre drama, Curtain Call.
The Kings Man is the third film in the Kingsman series and also stars Ralph Fiennes and Djimon Hounsou.
Gemma is again playing a secret agent but, unlike her Bond girl, Polly is funny and a bit different.
She added: I remember telling Matthew she is Mary Poppins but more rock n roll. She runs this global network of spies. Pollys incredibly quick and smart.
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Away from the cameras, Gemmas personal life couldnt be better.
She married Peaky Blinders and War & Peace actor Rory Keenan, 40, in a private ceremony in Co Wicklow, Ireland, last year.
The pair began dating shortly after appearing together in West End play Saint Joan, by George Bernard Shaw, in 2016.
During lockdown Irish Rory wrote and made two films, while Gemma took up painting.
The pair both love cooking and, as a huge fan of The Great British Bake Off, Gemma has even considered what she would make if she was given the chance to be a contestant.
During an interview on the Table Manners podcast, she said: I really like a Gypsy Tart which is a Kentish tart. If I went on GBBO, I would do that as its such a guilty pleasure.
Acting, film production, campaigning, baking . . . is there anything Gemma cannot do?
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My Bond girl should have turned down sex with 007, says Gemma Arterton - The Sun
Patty Hearst’s Daughters Now: Where Are Lydia and Gillian Hearst Today? Update – The Cinemaholic
Posted: at 1:51 pm
Investigation Discoverys The Crimes That Changed Us: Patty Hearst is an episode that chronicles the 1974 abduction of the then-19-year-old publishing heiress Patty Hearst by the urban guerrilla left-wing group Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA). Within months of this incident, Patty resurfaced again, but this time, she was working alongside SLA.
She later revealed that she had been brainwashed and threatened into joining them. And then, after a brief stint in prison for her actions, Patty turned over a new leaf and managed to create a normal life for herself. She found love, got married, and birthed two daughters, continuing her life in domestic bliss.
Gillian Hearst-Shaw, born on May 3, 1981, in Palo Alto, California, as Gillian Catherine Hearst-Shaw, is Pattys first-born. Her other daughter, Lydia Marie Hearst-Shaw, was born three years later, on September 19, 1984, in New Haven, Connecticut. They are both fathered by Pattys late longtime-husband, Bernard Shaw. The two girls grew up in Wilton, Connecticut, where they lived a good and stable life thanks to their surroundings. After all, their father was a security personnel, and their mother, at that time, was an active author and actress. Of course, the fact that their great grandfather was publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst helped their cause as well.
After attending The Lawrenceville School, the sisters went their separate ways. While Gillian earned a Bachelors of Science degree in Marketing from Georgetown University the McDonough School of Business, Lydia graduated from Wilton High School before attending the Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut. And since then, both of Patty Hearsts daughters have been in the spotlight in their own way. Gillian, quite like her great grandfather, has made a name for herself in the publishing industry, whereas Lydia is in the entertainment business as a fashion model, actress, and lifestyle blogger. She was a columnist before she launched her own blog.
Gillian Hearst joined Hearst Magazines, Town & Country, back in 2008 as an Editorial Assistant. And soon, she rose through the ranks, becoming an Associate Editor and Society Editor, before landing the position of a Contributing Editor, a post which she has held for over seven years now. Residing in Greater New York City, New York, the socialite used to be married to lawyer Christian Simonds, with whom she has three adorable daughters.
But in early 2018, after nearly ten years of marriage, Gillian filed for divorce, citing irreconcilable differences. So today, Gillian is a single working mother whose motto is, I know I cant do it all, but I can try. Lydia, on the other hand, was discovered by photographer Steven Meisel, who shot her first magazine cover for Vogue Italia in April 2004. Since then, the model has been featured in Harpers Bazaar, Elle, Marie Claire, GQ, LOfficiel, and Esquire, amongst many others.
Lydia has also walked the runway for fashion designers such as Chanel, Fendi, Catherine Malandrino, Nicole Miller, and Jeremy Scott. Some of her acting roles include Abigail Folger in The Haunting of Sharon Tate (2019), Charlotte Roberts in South of Hell, and Velvet in Velvet Morning (2012). And now, Lydia, residing in California, is married to actor and comedian Chris Hardwick.
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Patty Hearst's Daughters Now: Where Are Lydia and Gillian Hearst Today? Update - The Cinemaholic
6 new hotels to seek out in the UK and Ireland in 2021 – NewsChain
Posted: at 1:51 pm
The great advantage of a hotel is that it is a refuge from home life, claimed writer George Bernard Shaw.
Following a year of being cooped up in our houses, the idea of a future change of scenery has never been more appealing and the thought of having someone else cook, clean and even pull the curtains at night is blissful.
Although lockdowns and tier restrictions have created barriers for hoteliers, many plan to open new properties in 2021.
If youre dreaming of an escape once we are able to travel again, here are a few of the top new hotels due to open in the UK and Ireland that will be well worth seeking out.The Londoner,London
The capital has lost its mojo in recent months, but glamour and sophistication are set to bounce back next year with the opening of new hotel, The Londoner. Billed as the worlds first super boutique hotel, the 350-room property promises to deliver all the best bits of an intimate, designer set-up on a much bigger scale. Built with sustainability in mind, it has already received an excellent rating from BREEAM (Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method), exceeding requirements for energy and water use and choice of materials. Expect to find a ballroom, private screening rooms, underground spa and six restaurants in the Leicester Square setting. Open from April 12. From 341 per night with breakfast. Visit thelondoner.com
The Cashel Palace Hotel, Ireland
Following a meticulous restoration project, this sprawling country house is set to re-open in 2021. Built in 1734, it was once home to an Archbishop, eventually becoming a hotel in the early 1960s. Along with 42 bedrooms, new additions to the property will include a ballroom, a spa overlooking the gardens and the Bishops Buttery Restaurant serving a seasonal local menu. Highlight attractions close to the 25-acre site in Tipperary include The Rock Of Cashel, an ancient monument that was once the seat of the High Kings of Munster. Prices TBC. Visit cashelpalacehotel.ie
Bodmin Jail Hotel, Cornwall
A night behind bars might not sound too appealing, but the new Bodmin Jail Hotel is set to put a fun spin on mock prison stays. Find bars on the windows, stone walls and an original guard tower at the 70-room Cornish property, which sits alongside a new immersive visitor attraction inside the revamped 18th century Bodmin Jail. Fortunately, the cells today, which form part of the original civil, naval and womens wings, also have more luxurious fittings such as free-standing baths and vast beds. The Governors Office has been transformed into a cocktail bar, and theres a restaurant serving traditional afternoon tea and filling British fodder. Open from February 12. Rooms from 104 with breakfast. Visit bodminjailhotel.com
The Harper, North Norfolk
Forced to close its doors before even opening, this new Norfolk hotel plans to finally welcome guests from March 5. A short drive from Blakeney on the coast, in the village of Langham, the former glass-blowing factory will feature 32 rooms, two restaurants, a bar, a lounge with wood-burning stove, play area with a projector for movie nights, and a luxury spa with a swimming pool, Jacuzzi, steam room, sauna and treatments. Paying homage to its past, the property will be decorated with locally-crafted artisanal glass features. But the best artwork of all sits outside in Norfolks big skies and beautiful seascapes. Rooms from 175 including breakfast. Visit theharper.co.uk
Eden Project hotel, Cornwall
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The Eden Project is already one of the highlights of a visit to Cornwall. But next year, a new 8.5million project will see the addition of a 109-bedroom hotel, welcoming even more guests to the attraction. Designed by Tate Harmer, one of the UKs leading architects for sustainability and natural environments, the property has been built to blend into the surrounding environment, incorporating existing features such as trees and stone walls. There are also plans to create a meadow and an orchard around the hotel. Alongside bedrooms, a series of classrooms will support students enrolling for educational programmes. Open 2021. Prices TBC. Visit edenproject.com
Famous for being the archetypal Scottish country estate in Perthshire, Gleneagles launches its urban arm in Edinburgh in Autumn 2021. Housed in a renovated 200-year-old Bank of Scotland building in St Andrew Square, the townhouse will have 33 bedrooms, an all-day restaurant and two bars including a panoramic rooftop terrace. Local residents can enjoy access to a members club for work or play, with access to exclusive private spaces and on-site gym and wellness facilities. Prices TBC. Visit gleneaglestownhouse.com.
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6 new hotels to seek out in the UK and Ireland in 2021 - NewsChain
Muhammad (pbuh), the Best of Mankind – Kashmir Reader
Posted: at 1:51 pm
Many western scholars and writers have praised the Prophet as the greatest man in history, but still the western society wont pay heed
Allah (swt) has been very clear in the Quran about the status of the Prophet (pbuh). Not only that, Allah (swt) has cursed those who tried to hurt the Prophet (pbuh) physically or emotionally and spoke ill of him. Once Abu Lahab used offensive language against the Prophet (pbuh), to which Allah (swt) replied through the Quran: May the hands of Abu Lahab be ruined and ruined be he (111: 1). Walid ibn Mughaira was an enemy who would speak ill about the Prophet (pbuh). Allah (swt) responded by mentioning his ten flaws in Surah Qalam (68:10-13) and ended by saying that Walid ibn Mughaira was born out of wedlock. For any Muslim, these verses of the holy book are enough to understand how dear the Prophet (pbuh) is to the creator, Allah. Further, these verses are sufficient to conclude that the Prophet is the best of all creations. His slighting is intolerable even to the Almighty. However, it is not necessary that non-Muslims will ponder over these verses and will take them seriously. Plus, we cannot coerce any non-Muslim to believe these verses. However, there are many other sources to learn about the best of humankind the Prophet (pbuh). Christians can find his name in the Bible (revealed to Jesus Christ), Jews in the Torah (revealed to Moses), and Hindus in their scriptures. The atheists who have no interest in religion can also get to know about the Messenger of Allah without touching any religious scripture. They can get a fair perspective about almost all aspects of Muhammad (pbuh) by reading eminent non-Muslim scholars. Many non-Muslims have commented on the different qualities, talents, and temperamental genius of the Holy Prophet (pbuh). Let us have a glance at the views of some of them. French historian Alphonse de Lamartine held the view that no man is greater than Muhammad. The historian wrote about the achievements of the Prophet (pbuh), such as subverting superstitions, restoring the rational and sacred idea of divinity, and declared that no other could do so in history. Never has a man accomplished such a huge and lasting revolution in the world, he wrote. Furthermore, he called Muhammad as philosopher, orator, legislator, warrior, conqueror of ideas, restorer of rational dogmas, founder of twenty terrestrial empires and a spiritual empire. As regards all standards by which human greatness may be measured, we may well ask, is there any man greater than he (Histoire de la Turquie). Michael Hart, an American author, in his book The Hundreds calls Muhammad the most influential person in History. Hart writes, He (Muhammad) was the only man in history who was supremely successful on both the religious and secular levels. George Bernard Shaw, the famous British playwright, wrote that if a man like Muhammad were to assume the dictatorship of the modern world, he would succeed in resolving its problems in a way which would usher/herald much-needed peace and happiness (The Genuine Islam). Thomas Carlyle, political philosopher and historian of England, after commenting on various attributes of Muhammad in his famous book On Heroes, Hero-worship, and the Heroic in History asserts: Yes, the world today is in dire need of a man like Muhammad to solve its complex problems. Muhammad in truth is the Prophet of sublime morals. German philosopher Johann Goethe while glorifying the Prophet described him as the hero of humanity. Several other notable scholars and thinkers took a keen interest in reading and researching about the Prophet (pbuh). Interestingly, almost everyone declared Muhammad as the greatest person in the history of mankind. After going through their writings it becomes evident that none of them disagrees with the faith of Muslims that No one is like Muhammad (pbuh) and no one can be like Him. However, some people in contemporary times are not willing to accept the opinion of these men of letters even though they belong to their own race and religion. They deliberately pay no attention to the views of these historical personalities. They neither give any thought to their ideas and message, nor do they carry out independent research of their own. If they happen to read about the Prophet (pbuh) they take biased, prejudiced, and impartial writers into consideration, which is unjust. They do the reverse of what these thinkers stood for to call the spade the spade. They waste their energies to malign Islam and its founder. They say whatever comes to their mind and call it freedom of speech. Under the garb of this freedom, they sadistically create caricatures to insult Muhammad (pbuh) and his billions of followers, thereby inciting violence. To be frank, nothing good could be expected from those infected with Islamophobia which seems to have no cure. They may not shun this derogatory approach but the ideology and works of their scholars will always serve as proof that Muhammad (pbuh) is superior to all. Also, Muslims need to steady their nerves and promote, propagate, and practise Islamic teachings and proudly highlight the opinion of influential literary figures of the world. This is the best answer that could be given to Islamophobes.
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Muhammad (pbuh), the Best of Mankind - Kashmir Reader
Patty Hearst Now: Where is She Today? Is She in Jail? Update – The Cinemaholic
Posted: at 1:51 pm
Investigation Discoverys The Crimes That Changed Us tells us the tales of the baffling cases that have been seared into the American consciousness those that have become a part of how we look at our society. With archival footage, audio accounts, and one-on-one interviews, this series reintroduces such cases from a brand new standpoint and helps us re-immerse ourselves into it. So, of course, its latest episode titled, Patty Hearst, chronicling the life and 1974 kidnapping of Patty Hearst, is no different. Now, since its been a while since everything transpired, lets find out more about Patty and where she is now, shall we?
Born on February 20, 1964, Patty Hearst, or Patricia Campbell Hearst Shaw is the granddaughter of 19th-century media mogul William Randolph Hearst. As the third of five daughters of Randolph A. Hearst and an heiress, she attended private schools in Los Angeles, San Mateo, Crystal Springs, and Monterey in California, before undertaking courses at Menlo College in Atherton, California and the University of California, Berkeley.
However, her whole life turned upside down on the night of February 4, 1974, when she and her then-fianc, Steven Weed, were at her Berkeley flat, thinking of spending some quality time together. That night, three members of an urban guerrilla left-wing group, called the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), broke into her flat, beat up her fianc, and then kidnapped 19-year old Patty. Their goal was to garner a hefty ransom from her wealthy father.
But in a strange turn of events, two months after Patty was captured, she recorded an audiotape, heard around the world, announcing that she was now a member of SLA. In the months that followed, more such tapes were released by the group, and soon, Patty also started actively participating in the SLA-led criminal activity across California. She then became known as Tania. As a part of SLA, Patty extorted nearly $2 million from her father and had a hand in at least two different robberies.
Ultimately, though, on September 18, 1975, after more than 19 months since her abduction, Patty was arrested by the FBI in a San Francisco apartment. Shortly thereafter, she started showing signs of trauma. And when she stood trial for her actions, Patty testified that she was raped, coerced, and brainwashed under humiliating circumstances to join SLA. Nonetheless, in March 1976, Patty was convicted for the robberies and sentenced to 7 years in prison. She was released in 1979 after President Jimmy Carter commuted her sentence.
Two months after her release, Patty Hearst married Bernard Lee Shaw, a policeman who was a part of her personal security detail when she was out of prison on bail. She subsequently published her memoir Every Secret Thing, co-written with Alvin Moscow, in 1982, where she gave a detailed account of her ordeals from 1974 to 1979. In the years that followed, Patty occasionally came into the public eye giving interviews, producing a special for the Travel Channel wherein she took viewers on a tour of her grandfathers impressive mansion.
She has also appeared in feature films like Cry-Baby (1990), Serial Mom (1994), Cecil B. DeMented (2000), and A Dirty Shame (2004). Patty also collaborated with Cordelia Frances Biddle to write Murder at San Simeon, a novel based upon the death of Thomas H. Ince on her grandfathers yacht. In 2001, she was granted a full pardon by President Bill Clinton as he was leaving office. Since then, Patty has been living a normal life, or at least as regular as a life that comes with being a wealthy woman on the East Coast. Patty wants nothing more than to put her past and trauma behind her.
When CNN made the documentary The Radical Story Of Patty Hearst, aiming to reexamine her history, Patty released a statement denouncing it. Its no secret that I was abducted, raped, and tortured at 19, she said. What followed was a series of events that were the direct result of a child having been destroyed both inside and out. Patty further went on to add, As hard as it was to do, I have grown well past the 19-year-old me and gone on to become a proud wife, mother, and grandmother.
She added, I have no interest in revisiting such a violent and hurtful time in my life. Now, Patty Hearst, a philanthropist, resides in Charleston, South Carolina, and can mostly be seen with her French bulldogs, competing in contests all around the nation. In fact, back in 2017, she even took home two titles at the Westminster Dog Show, revealing to the New York Times that she was kind of walking on air at the moment.
Read More: How Did Patty Hearsts Husband Die?
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Patty Hearst Now: Where is She Today? Is She in Jail? Update - The Cinemaholic
Make Time for Reading With This Discounted Book Summary Library – PCMag.com
Posted: at 1:49 pm
Trends suggest Americans spend less time reading overall. But if that describes you, itprobably doesn't mean you hate to read. More often than not, we don't make time for reading because there are so many things that compete for our attention on any given day.
And that's a shame because even if you can't read for pleasure, there are so many things that today's nonfiction authors have to teach us. Luckily, there's a new service aimed at those whose minds are too curious for their busy lifestyle.Four Minute Books summarizes hundreds of books and contains resources to make you a better reader, help you retain what you read, and leave your brain hungry for more.
Each month, Four Minute Books adds 12 new titles to its aptly named library of summaries. These condensed versions of popular business and self-help titles are designed so you can understand the core concepts and important takeaways without all the filler. The library already includes bestsellers like Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers, Eckhart Tolle's The Power of Now, Mark Manson's The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck, and hundreds more, all available as PDF files (and many of which can be listened to as audiobooks).
You've got complete freedom to read these life-changing books however and whenever you want: Download them to a dedicated Dropbox for offline perusal or play audiobooks via any major podcast app. Subscribers even get access to 10 reading and self-improvement handbooks, including The Complete Guide to Remembering What You Read, as well as a customizable Evernote notebook.
PCMag readers can sign up for lifetime access to Four Minute Books for $39.9990 percent off the MSRP.
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Make Time for Reading With This Discounted Book Summary Library - PCMag.com
The most important thing to do this holiday season – Houston Chronicle
Posted: at 1:49 pm
We all have a lot to do.
Then when you add the holidays in, typical to-do lists easily double even this year.
Its natural to feel some pressure, and to get caught up in all the doing, but when that happens, we overlook something important.
I caught this in myself recently.
My almost 3-year-old daughter is developmentally delayed and has a host of congenital issues that have required eight surgeries so far and very diligent medical care. That said, shes a feisty and opinionated little person who continues to make unbelievable progress in her own time.
MORE FEELING MATTERS: Its time to give yourself more credit
She is a tough cookie, and while I cringe at how this sounds, Im an aggressive mom. Our girl literally averages about 15 appointments per week, between therapy and doctors visits. And when Im not chauffeuring between sessions, Im doing as much as I can to make learning a constant at home.
Ive considered this to be my job. I believe moms should busily take care of all their kids needs, all while talking, engaging and teaching at every opportunity.
But Ive recently realized that while being focused on this, I am actually, ever so slightly, missing something.
Ive considered quality time with my baby shark, as we call her, to be singing songs that teach her new words, or practicing colors, or pointing out body parts, or learning to work with Legos or playing ball.
But while rereading one of my favorite books, The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle, it occurred to me that while that stuff is great, doing something at all times is not necessary or even ideal. More is needed. Something different is needed.
Its simple, but so easy to miss: she needs me to put down my perpetual agenda and meet her where she is.
It requires me to step out of autopilot and join her with no ulterior motivesolely with the intention to be together, on her level, and her terms, however that looks right then.
Again, its simple, but shockingly not easy.
MORE FEELING MATTERS: Why its good to have friends who scare you (in the right way)
Aiming to do this the other day, I joined her underneath a blanket on the couch, where she likes to chill. It was sweet and cozy, and while cuddling, I found myself filling the space with my usual semi-mindless yammering: How are you, honey? Are you good!? Can you say good!?
She didnt dignify any of this with a response, so I kept going.
Good, good, good. This little girl is good, good, good.
Blah, blah, blah.
To reiterate, theres nothing wrong with this, and of course, it is good to talk to your kids! This is extremely subtle, but it seems that plainly meeting her, without asking 20 questions or prodding her to learn or perform, is tricky for me. Im constantly poking!
The good news is that awareness helps turn things around.
That day on the couch, I caught myself. I stopped trying to take over her moment and snuggled in a little more.
She was lightly stroking the blanket and seemed to be appreciating the warm light under our makeshift tent. I stopped and joined in. Basically, we just sat there together.
Nothing extraordinary happened, and it was only for a few minutes, but it was sweet and a tender enough moment that it stands out to me even a few weeks later. Its now on my radar as just as important as engaging her and working.
I bring this up because its worth remembering if youre around kids a lot. And, its worth remembering if you find yourself pushing, getting stressed, encountering resistance, or just going, going, doing, doing, especially this time of year. Maybe theres an opportunity to pause all that, recognize the moment, and join it.
Even just brief moments of this offers something sweet.
These holidays are undoubtedly different from usual, but the beauty is still right there.
Marci Izard Sharif is an author, yoga teacher, meditation facilitator and mother. In Feeling Matters, she writes about self-love, sharing self-care tools, stories and resources that center around knowing and being kind to yourself. For her classes and more, go to marcisharif.com.
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The most important thing to do this holiday season - Houston Chronicle