"Every single actress since 1970 who has won a Best Actress Oscar (except four)"
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katharine_isabelle_world — 13 years ago(October 28, 2012 10:33 PM)
BTW - Katharine was offered the role of Monica - and then after accepting - was told that she instead was going to have to play the role of Gibb!
Her passion for horses has nothing to do with her career (she does have a life outside of acting!!).
Katharine has also many times expressed her love of acting - and not fame - as her career motivator. We wished some of you could meet her in person. You might find that there is much more to her personality - and talent - than "nude scenes", etc.
Katharine Isabelle World now on Twitter!
http://twitter.com/#!/Katies_World112 -
Gambit_78 — 10 years ago(September 18, 2015 11:23 AM)
Well what about /Hannibal/ and /How to Plan an Orgy in 1c84a Small Town/?
Hannibal = body double (from what I remember reading
How to Plan = Hasn't been released yet so nobody knows until then
Valar Morghulis -
freeist — 10 years ago(August 23, 2015 10:24 PM)
That's right! Very good.
Three years this thread as been here idle and you disturb its slumber to correct a redundancy, and one where redundancy actually clarifies. I guess that goes to show any slight mistake on the Internet can come back to haunt me years later.
Despite what your English teacher told you, sometimes redundancies and mixed metaphors are acceptable
Let me explain. Zenith means highest point, and its original use was to describe celestial bodies in the sky. However, a person's career does not behave like a celestial body as seen from Earth. There are plateaus and comebacks, and sudden drops off the radar. When I said it was all downhill from there, it means it means the descent was fast.
It was a mixed metaphor. But if you're talking about a person who's a "star," zenith is the best word.
Though I guess have said that they cratered. But stars don't crater, meteors do. And crater was a little too fast for me.