Maurice Maeterlinck love

Maurice Maeterlinck

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Examples

  • They've collaborated before on atmospheric, if somewhat less-edgy productions—for example, mounting Maurice Maeterlinck 's 1890 "The Blind," on a boat in the Hudson River in March.

    Night Out on the Town Ralph Gardner Jr. 2011

  • In this regard, it falls within the realist camp of Symbolism, as opposed to the fabulistic strain represented by the plays of Maurice Maeterlinck.

    Incarnating the World Within James Gardner 2011

  • His native Ghent celebrates this centennial with "The World of George Minne and Maurice Maeterlinck," an exploration of Maeterlincks's influence and friendship with Belgian sculptor and artist George Minne.

    What's On Around Europe 2011

  • The credits for "Botanica" include a Maurice Maeterlinck quote about the power of plants "to approach another kingdom, to enter a moving, animated world."

    A Pruned Garden of Delights Robert Greskovic 2011

  • Based on the play by Maurice Maeterlinck, it is the story of an inscrutable love triangle pieced together, and simultaneously dissolved, in a multitude of sidelong glances and half-hazarded yearnings.

    An Otherworldly Opera Jonathan Blitzer 2011

  • Mr. Hurt determined to be an actor after appearing in a school production of Maurice Maeterlinck's "The Blue Bird."

    A Face to Match That Name Joanne Kaufman 2011

  • This lengthy 1902 masterpiece of Impressionism, based on an inscrutable Symbolist play by Maurice Maeterlinck, can feel like an excursion into the dark, trackless forests so often invoked in the opera, but Mr. Rattle's masterly shaping of its flowing melodies and shifting harmonic landscape turned it into a drama.

    A Light in the Forest of This Debussy Work Heidi Waleson 2010

  • They found similar ideas in Mary Magdalene, a play by Maurice Maeterlinck, in a couple of obscure poems, and Judas Iscariot, a novel by Leonid Andreyev, who wrote He Who Gets Slapped.

    Empire of Dreams Scott Eyman 2010

  • In 1904, she played Pelléas in a London production of Pelléas and Mélisande by Maurice Maeterlinck (1862 – 1949).

    Sarah Bernhardt. 2009

  • Such works were praised by Symbolist writers who considered them visual counterparts of the poetry of Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé and Maurice Maeterlinck.

    Archive 2009-04-01 2009

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