I’m currious tumblr what is your phones lockscreen and/or background?
if there is more than one of these categories present please just choose one. for example if you have a loved one and a pet in the pic choose either the loved one or the pet option.
what is your phones lockscreen?
a loved one (family, partner, friends, in general a human, can be more than 1)
character(s) from your favourite show/book/movie/podcast
a beloved pet (any pet, can be a dog, a cat, a bird or what ever)
an animal (any animal that is not a pet, for example a crow, eels)
plants (can be any kind of plant)
landscape (a sunset, your garden, that pic you took of the area on a walk)
just some art (not a character/person/loved one/pet)
just some art (can be a person/monster/not a character from your fav. show)
just a single color (what the fuck are you even doing with your phone?)
something else, please specify in tags
See Resultsplease reblog for a bigger sample size!
forgive my confession: i let the reins of my studies go / and less and less letters are traced by my hand. / that sacred passion that nurtures poet hearts, / the one that used to be within me, is no more. / the muse barely does her part, barely she lifts her / sluggish hand, almost forced, to the tablet she took; / i find little pleasure, not to say none, in writing / and weaving words in verse does not bring me joy. / either the reason is that it did not benefit me at all, / so much that this act is the source of my disgrace, / or that writing a poem no one will read is the same / as dancing in the dark. (ovid, epistulae ex ponto, 4.2.23-34)
no words can describe how this makes me feel
Stephen Sondheim, one of Broadway history’s songwriting titans, whose music and lyrics raised and reset the artistic standard for the American stage musical, died early Friday at his home in Roxbury, Conn. He was 91.
His lawyer and friend, F. Richard Pappas, announced the death, which he described as sudden. The day before, Mr. Sondheim had celebrated Thanksgiving with a dinner with friends in Roxbury, Mr. Pappas said.
An intellectually rigorous artist who perpetually sought new creative paths, Mr. Sondheim was the theater’s most revered and influential composer-lyricist of the last half of the 20th century, if not its most popular.
His work melded words and music in a way that enhanced them both. From his earliest successes in the late 1950s, when he wrote the lyrics for “West Side Story” and “Gypsy,” through the 1990s, when he wrote the music and lyrics for two audacious musicals, “Assassins,” giving voice to the men and women who killed or tried to kill American presidents, and “Passion,” an operatic probe into the nature of true love, he was a relentlessly innovative theatrical force.
The first Broadway show for which Mr. Sondheim wrote both the words and music, the farcical 1962 comedy “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” won a Tony Award for best musical and went on to run for more than two years.
In the 1970s and 1980s, his most productive period, he turned out a series of strikingly original and varied works, including “Company” (1970), “Follies” (1971), “A Little Night Music” (1973), “Pacific Overtures” (1976), “Sweeney Todd” (1979), “Merrily We Roll Along” (1981), “Sunday in the Park With George” (1984) and “Into the Woods” (1987).
In the history of the theater, only a handful could call Mr. Sondheim peer. The list of major theater composers who wrote words to accompany their own scores (and vice versa) is a short one — it includes Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, Frank Loesser, Jerry Herman and Noël Coward.
Though Mr. Sondheim spent long hours in solitary labor, usually late at night, when he was composing or writing, he often spoke lovingly of the collaborative nature of the theater. After the first decade of his career, he was never again a writer for hire, and his contribution to a show was always integral to its conception and execution. He chose collaborators — notably the producer and director Hal Prince, the orchestrator Jonathan Tunick and later the writer and director James Lapine — who shared his ambition to stretch the musical form beyond the bounds of only entertainment.
Mr. Sondheim’s music was always recognizable as his own, and yet he was dazzlingly versatile. His melodies could be deceptively, disarmingly simple — like the title song of the unsuccessful 1964 musical “Anyone Can Whistle,” “Our Time,” from “Merrily,” and the most famous of his individual songs, “Send In the Clowns,” from “Night Music” — or jaunty and whimsical, like “Everybody Ought to Have a Maid,” from “Forum.”
They could also be brassy and bitter, like “The Ladies Who Lunch,” from “Company,” or sweeping, like the grandly macabre waltz “A Little Priest,” from “Sweeney Todd.” And they could be exotic, like “Someone in a Tree” and “Pretty Lady,” both from “Pacific Overtures,” or desperately yearning, like the plaintive “I Read,” from “Passion.”
simon memorial post. that was one fucked up old man
Jonny Sims, writer of the podcast: TMA is a horror tragedy and will end as a tragedy.
Annabelle, master manipulator created by above-mentioned writer: No one has to die or be consumed by a dark power😏
Me, a fool: omg no one has to die or be consumed by a dark power!!🥰
the duality of man
ID: a picture of the happy/distraught man meme. the happy part reads “tma comes back next week and then it’s non stop episodes until the series finale”. the distraught part also reads “tma comes back next week and then it’s non stop episodes until the series finale”
Me leaving the theatre December 17 2015: Wow! I can’t wait for Finn to become a Jedi and lead a storm trooper revolution, and Rey to be a skywalker/Kenobi, and Poe to be a main character with development and lead with Leia, and Luke helping his sister lead the new rebellion and train Finn and Rey. And Hux and Kylo and Phasma are gonna be an evil trio! So much cool stuff is gonna happen!
Episode 177 is basically
pov: a British man roasts and gaslights you for several minutes