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Life and Richard
* 1978: Dylan: Life and Death of a Poet, a BBC Wales film of Thomas ' final two visits to America ; directed by Richard Lewis.
* Osborne, Richard, Rossini: His Life and Works.
* Richard Beeston, Looking For Trouble: The Life and Times of a Foreign Correspondent, 1997, published by Brassey's, London.
Master animator Richard Williams explains the KISS principle in his book The Animator's Survival Kit, and Disney's Nine Old Men write about it in Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life, which is considered " the animation bible " by CG, traditional, and stop motion animators.
Richard Webster comments in his A Brief History of Blasphemy that, " internalised censorship played a significant role in the handling " of Monty Python's Life of Brian.
In Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of King Richard the Third ( 1768 ), Walpole disputed all the alleged murders and argued that Richard may have acted in good faith.
* Adomnán, Life of Saint Columba translated and edited Richard Sharpe.
* Sudhalter, Richard M. Stardust Melody: The Life and Music of Hoagy Carmichael.
* Richard Barthelmess: A Life in Pictures by David W. Menefee
Richard Price was credited with the first textbook on life contingencies published in 1771, followed later by Augustus de Morgan, ‘ On the Application of Probabilities to Life Contingencies ’ ( 1838 ).
Fonda appeared in a revival of The Time of Your Life that opened in March 17, 1972 at the Huntington Hartford Theater in Los Angeles where Fonda, Richard Dreyfuss, Gloria Grahame, Ron Thompson, Strother Martin, Jane Alexander, Lewis J. Stadlen, Richard X. Slattery and Pepper Martin were among the cast with Edwin Sherin directing.
) ( 1847 ): Memoirs of the Life and Times of Sir Christopher Hatton Richard Bentley
* Travel writer Richard Halliburton ( 1900 – 1939 ) gathered material, including an interview with Brooke's mother, for an eventual biography of Brooke, but completion of the task fell to Arthur Springer whose Red Wine of Youth — A Life of Rupert Brooke, benefitting from Halliburton's researches, appeared in 1952.
The historical parallels in the succession of Richard II may not have been intended as political comment on the contemporary situation, with the weak Richard II analogous to Queen Elizabeth and an implicit argument in favour of her replacement by a monarch capable of creating a stable dynasty, but lawyers investigating John Hayward's historical work, The First Part of the Life and Raigne of King Henrie IV, a book partly derived from Shakespeare's Richard II, chose to make this connection.
* Horace Walpole-Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of Richard III ( 1768 )
* Abels, Richard, William Marshal — Events in Life and Historical Context
His roles include Brutus in Julius Caesar ( 1953 ), Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel and The Desert Rats, the amoral valet turned spy in Joseph Mankiewicz's 5 Fingers, the declining actor in the first remake of A Star Is Born ( 1954 ), Captain Nemo in 20, 000 Leagues Under the Sea ( also 1954 ), a small town school teacher driven insane by the effects of cortisone in Bigger Than Life ( 1956 ), a suave master spy in North by Northwest ( 1959 ), a determined explorer in Journey to the Center of the Earth ( also 1959 ), Humbert Humbert in Stanley Kubrick's Lolita ( 1962 ), a river pirate who betrays Peter O ' Toole's character in Lord Jim ( 1965 ), the evil Doctor Polidori in Frankenstein: The True Story ( 1973 ), the vampire's servant, Richard Straker, in Salem's Lot, and surreal Royal Navy Captain Hughes in Yellowbeard ( 1983 ).
* Richard Chorley, R. P. Beckinsale, and A. J. Dunn, The History of the Study of Landforms, Vol 2, The Life and Work of William Morris Davis ( Methuen, 1973 )
Fletcher, Richard A., " St. James ' Catapult: The Life and Times of Diego Gelmirez ", Chapter 1 and passim: Galicia, online at http :// libro. uca. edu / sjc / sjc. htm which offers a historical and geographical background to the building of the cathedral in Compostela, and
* Ann Bevins, Richard M Johnson narrative: Personal and Family Life.

Life and Strauss
In fact, her first major literary work was translating into English Strauss ' Life of Jesus ( 1846 ), which she completed after it had been begun by another member of the Rosehill circle.
* Translation of " The Life of Jesus Critically Examined " Volume 2 by David Strauss, 1846
Strauss went on to write a series of increasingly ambitious tone poems: Death and Transfiguration ( 1889 ), Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks ( 1895 ), Thus Spoke Zarathustra ( 1896 ), Don Quixote ( 1897 ), A Hero's Life ( 1898 ), Symphonia Domestica ( 1903 ) and An Alpine Symphony ( 1911 – 1915 ).
Hermann Samuel Reimarus ( 1694 – 1768 ) started the historical Jesus project and David Friedrich Strauss established it as part of biblical criticism with his book Life of Jesus Critically Examined ( 1835 ).
Aside from the work he published in 1832 his Geschichte der Pflanzung und Leitung der christlichen Kirche durch die Apostel, and in 1837 his Das Leben Jesu Christi, in seinem geschichilichen Zusammenhang und seiner geschichtlichen Entwickelung, called forth by the famous Life of David Strauss.
He published the first part of it in 1835, the year in which David Strauss, his colleague, published his Life of Jesus ; completed it in 1839, and afterwards considerably enlarged it for a second edition ( 1845 – 1856 ).
It was the outcry caused by David Strauss ' The Life of Jesus in 1835 which first made the ' Young Hegelians ' aware of their existence as a distinct group, and it was their attitude to religion that distinguished the left and right from then onwards ( August Cieszkowski is a possible exception to this rule ).
David Strauss wrote Das Leben Jesu ( The Life of Jesus | The Life of Jesus, Critically Examined ) in 1835, in which he argued-in a Hegelian framework-against both the supernatural elements of the Gospel and the idea that the Christian church was the sole bearer of absolute truth.
In the same year in which David Strauss published his Life of Jesus, Vatke issued his book, Die Religion des Alten Testaments nach den kanonischen Büchern entwickelt, which contained the seeds of a revolution in the ideas held about the Old Testament.
Also, English conductor Sir Roger Norrington pointed out in his interview with fellow conductor Charles Hazlewood that was broadcast on BBC on 25th July 2011 prior to his performance of Mahler's Ninth Symphony with the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, that Mahler quoted five times Johann Strauss Jr .' s waltz for the opening ball of Musikverein in Vienna, titled " Freut euch des Lebens " ( 1870 ), or " Enjoy Life ".
Possibly the most adept at musical depiction in his program music was the German composer Richard Strauss, whose symphonic poems include Death and Transfiguration ( portraying a dying man and his entry into heaven ), Don Juan ( based on the ancient legend of Don Juan ), Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks ( based on episodes in the career of the legendary German figure Till Eulenspiegel ), Don Quixote ( portraying episodes in the life of Miguel de Cervantes ' character, Don Quixote ), A Hero's Life ( which depicts episodes in the life of an unnamed hero often taken to be Strauss himself ) and Symphonia Domestica ( which portrays episodes in the composer's own married life, including putting the baby to bed ).
News of the 1830 July Revolution at Paris had moved him deeply, and the general atmosphere of radicalism pervading Europe at that time, and perhaps more specifically a reading of the Life of Jesus by David Friedrich Strauss, influenced Gutzkow in the composition of this first novel, which exalts the agnosticism and emancipated views of the heroine, Wally.
Johann Strauss II and Josef Strauss both presented sparkling new works at the ' Hesperus ' Ball which was held at the Dianabad-Saal on 18 February 1867, with the ' Artists Life ' waltz presented just three nights after the successful performance of The Blue Danube at the same venue.
Its leader, Bruno Bauer was a student who had attended Hegel ’ s lectures and was then asked to defend the position of the Old Hegelians against the claims of Strauss ’ s Life of Jesus.
Beiträge zur Beantwortung der gegenwärtigen Lebensfrage der Theologie ( 1838 ; 2nd ed., 1866 ) was a reply to Strauss's Life of Jesus, and his criticism resulted in Strauss making numerous concessions in later works.

Life and .
The cyclist, a sufficiently commonplace young fellow, is not named but identified simply as `` Life '' -- that and a license number, which Piepsam uses in addressing him.
`` Life '' points out that `` everybody uses this path '', and starts to ride on.
Piepsam tries to stop him by force, receives a push in the chest from `` Life '', and is left standing in impotent and growing rage, while a crowd begins to gather.
that is, on the basis of his own sinfulness and abject wretchedness, Piepsam becomes a prophet who in his ecstasy and in the name of God imprecates doom on Life -- not only the cyclist now, but the audience, the world, as well: `` all you light-headed breed ''.
The cyclist, by contrast, blond and blue-eyed, is simply unreflective, unproblematic Life, `` blithe and carefree ''.
But he is more interesting than the others, the ones who come from the highroad to watch him, more interesting than Life considered as a cyclist.
`` Gladius Dei '' ( 1902 ) resembles `` The Way To The Churchyard '' in its representation of a conflict between light and dark, between `` Life '' and a spirit of criticism, negation, melancholy, but it goes considerably further in characterizing the elements of this conflict.
The earlier of them was an unofficial enterprise, sponsored by Life magazine, under the title of The National Purpose.
Nothing testifies more clearly to that cleavage than the peculiar editorial page appearing in a July issue of Life Magazine, the issue which also carried the second announcement of the candidacy.
By her eighteenth birthday her bent for writing was so evident that Papa and Mamma gave her a Life Of Dickens as a spur to her aspiration.
I fled, however, not from what might have been the natural fear of being unable to disguise from you that the things about my bridegroom -- in the sense you meant the word `` things '' -- which you had been galvanizing yourself to tell me as a painful part of your maternal duty were things which I had already insisted upon finding out for myself ( despite, I may now say, the unspeakable awkwardness of making the discovery on principle, yes, on principle, and in cold blood ) because I was resolved, as a modern woman, not to be a mollycoddle waiting for Life but to seize Life by the throat.
First The Life Of John Bright appeared and seven years later Lord Grey Of The Reform Bill.
Of the two, The Life Of Bright is incomparably the better biography.
There is plenty more to recommend Gorton, the facts of whose life are given in The Life And Times Of Samuel Gorton, by Adelos Gorton.
As the total number of incepting bachelors in 1629 was, according to Masson ( Life, 1:218 ) and n, two hundred fifty-nine, the twenty-four names listed in the ordo senioritatis for that year constitute slightly less than one tenth of the total number of bachelors who then incepted.
Life, they say, should be regarded as sacred and, therefore, as something that neither an individual nor his society has a right to take away.
Some memorable plays have been drawn from books, notably Life With Father and Diary Of Anne Frank.
Representatives of Harvard University Press, which is publishing the book this month of April, recognize and freely acknowledge that they invited such reaction by allowing Life magazine to print an excerpt from the book in advance of the book's publication date.
Life was a short play of tenebrous shadows.
the `` sober opinion '' of his letter to Noyes, written when Hardy was eighty years old, is essentially that of his first `` philosophical '' notebook entry, made when he was twenty-five: `` The world does not despise us: it only neglects us '' ( Early Life, p. 63 ).
Two entries in The Early Life support the assumption that during this period Hardy had virtually suspended the writing of poetry.
and on Christmas Day, 1890, Hardy wrote: `` While thinking of resuming ' the viewless Wings Of Poesy before dawn this morning, new horizons seemed to open, and worrying pettinesses to disappear '' ( Early Life, p. 302 ).
It may seem strange that a poet should come to full fruition in his seventies, but we have it on Hardy's own authority that `` he was a child till he was sixteen, a youth till he was five-and-twenty, and a young man till he was nearly fifty '' ( Early Life, p. 42 ).
This carried over into the more urbanized late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the man ruled the roost in the best bull-roaring Life With Father manner.

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