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roméo et juliette
Feuding families, star-crossed lovers, a nutty nurse and a scheming friar – who is not familiar with Shakespeare’s most famous love story. Nevertheless, a new opera production of Romeo and Juliet is calculated to raise an eyebrow or two. |
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feigning to be funny
Larry Feign is a big famous professional cartoonist and writer whom bc magazine tricked into writing this article for free by promising that
you, dear reader, will run out and buy his book, Hongkongitis. And so now you have to, or we’ll be sued for breach of contract, and the editor will have to go back to his old job as stage manager
at a well-known Pattaya transvestite bar. |
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big red book
Hemlock, you’re clearly a huge fan of the Hong Kong political infrastructure. You must be overwhelmed with excitement about the 10th Anniversary of the handover! Tell us what you’re feeling.
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dawning dances
In Hong Kong, multi-tasking comes naturally. At the office, people think nothing of talking on the phone and working on the computer at the same time. Out on the streets, they walk (or run), listen to music, send or receive text messages and chew gum simultaneously. Then there’s
Willy Tsao. |
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belissimo tostissimo
A chamber orchestra may not be as commanding as its symphonic counterpart but it may be much more colourful.
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zodiac
Talk about a tough sell. David Fincher’s most accomplished film to date is a true-crime masterpiece about the Zodiac, an enigmatic serial killer whose random approach to murder terrified Northern California throughout the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. |
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