Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Wish me LUCK!
Monday, September 28, 2009
Happy Birthday 2 ME!!
GROW HAIR GROW!!
I think I need some miracle grow for my hair. Just kidding, but seriously my hair needs to hurry up and grow! I used to have it in a short 1920s style bob, but I decided it was time to do something exciting! I am not exactly sure how I want it styled, but I think length wise I want it somewhere a little below my shoulders. maybe 2 inches below or something. I really wish my hair was wavy- like Taylor Swifts hair. Her hair is gorgeous!!
Friday, September 25, 2009
Social Climbers
Sunday, September 20, 2009
My Dream Dorm Room
A monogrammed cork board- Very CUTE! (And it is pink and green!)
A couple other random things.........
*framed black & white photos
*A cute rug
*Solid color bedspread
*Simple chair to go at the desk (Not a computer chair)
*Monogrammed blanket
*A hutch to go over the desk
Saturday, September 19, 2009
A Latte of Pumpkin Pie
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Bloggy Give-away!
Monday, September 14, 2009
Last minute Beach Trip!!
Friday, September 11, 2009
Eight Years ago.....
Thursday, September 10, 2009
One Flight Down
"Dont Know why
HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOURSELF?
All this Beauty
WHAT DO YOU LIKE IN A GIRL/GUY?
Kung fu Fighting
WHAT IS YOUR LIFE'S PURPOSE?
A plain Morning (HUH?)
WHAT IS YOUR MOTTO?
You cant Hurry Love
WHAT DO YOUR FRIENDS THINK OF YOU?
Nothing Better
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF VERY OFTEN?
Clark Gable
WHAT DO YOUR PARENTS THINK OF YOU?
Fly me to the Moon (OH GOSH I SURE HOPE NOT!)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR BEST FRIEND?
Gotta have you
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
Love Story
WHERE DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW UP?
ON the radio
WHAT SONG WILL THEY PLAY AT YOUR WEDDING?
Heart
WHAT WILL THEY PLAY AT YOUR FUNERAL?
Cold Cold Heart (NOW THAT IS JUST CREEPY!)
WHAT IS YOUR HOBBY/INTEREST?
Singing in the rain
WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST FEAR?
Someone Somewhere
WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST SECRET?
Upside down
A PERFECT DAY INCLUDES...
Boogie woogie bugle boy
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR FRIENDS?
lonestar
WHAT WILL YOU POST THIS AS?
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
HELP!
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Pirates of Penzance
Act I
"On the coast of Cornwall, at the time of Queen Victoria's reign, Frederic, a young man with a strong sense of duty, celebrates, amidst the pirates, the completion of his twenty-first year and the apparent end of his apprenticeship ("Pour, oh pour the pirate sherry"). The pirates' maid of all work, Ruth, appears and reveals that, as Frederic's nursemaid long ago ("When Frederic was a little lad"), she had made a mistake "through being hard of hearing": she had misheard Frederic's father's instructions and apprenticed him to a pirate, instead of to a ship's pilot.
Frederic has never seen any woman other than Ruth, and he believes her to be beautiful. The pirates know better and suggest that Frederic take Ruth with him when he returns to civilisation. Frederic announces that, although it pains him to do so, such is his sense of duty that, once free from his apprenticeship, he will be forced to devote himself to their extermination. He points out that they are not very successful pirates, since, being orphans themselves, they allow their prey to go free if they too are orphans. Frederic notes that word of this has got about, so captured ships' companies routinely claim to be orphans. Frederic invites the pirates to give up piracy and go with him, so that he need not destroy them, but the Pirate King notes that, compared with respectability, piracy is comparatively honest ("Oh! better far to live and die"). The pirates depart, leaving Frederic and Ruth. Frederic sees a group of beautiful young girls approaching the pirate lair, and realizes that Ruth lied to him about her appearance ("Oh false one! You have deceived me!"). Sending Ruth away, Frederic hides before the girls arrive.
The girls burst exuberantly upon the secluded spot ("Climbing over rocky mountain"). Frederic reveals himself ("Stop, ladies, pray!") and appeals to them to help him reform ("Oh! is there not one maiden breast?"). One of them, Mabel, responds to his plea, and chides her sisters for their lack of charity ("Oh sisters deaf to pity's name for shame!"). She sings to him ("Poor wand'ring one"), and Frederic and Mabel quickly fall in love. The other girls contemplate whether to eavesdrop or to leave the new couple alone ("What ought we to do?"), and eventually decide to "talk about the weather," although they steal a glance or two at the affectionate couple ("How beautifully blue the sky").
Frederic warns the girls of the pirates nearby ("Stay, we must not lose our senses"), but before they can flee, the pirates arrive and capture all the girls, intending to marry them ("Here's a first rate opportunity"). Mabel warns the pirates that the girls' father is a Major-General ("Hold, monsters!"), who soon arrives and introduces himself ("I am the very model of a modern Major-General"). He appeals to the pirates not to take his daughters, leaving him to face his old age alone. Having heard of the famous Pirates of Penzance, he pleads for their release on the ground that he's an orphan ("Oh, men of dark and dismal fate"). The soft-hearted pirates are sympathetic and release the girls ("Hail, Poetry!"), making Major-General Stanley and his daughters honorary members of their band ("Pray observe the magnanimity").
Act II
The Major-General sits in a ruined chapel on his estate, surrounded by his daughters. His conscience is tortured by the lie that he told the pirates, and the girls attempt to console him ("Oh dry the glist'ning tear"). The Sergeant of Police and his corps arrive to announce their readiness to go forth to arrest the pirates ("When the foeman bares his steel"). The girls loudly express their admiration of the police for facing likely slaughter at the hands of fierce and merciless foes. The police are unnerved by this, and remain around (to the Major-General's frustration) but finally leave.
Left alone, Frederic, who is to lead the group, pauses to reflect on his opportunity to atone for a life of piracy ("Now for the pirate's lair"), at which point he encounters Ruth and the Pirate King. It has occurred to them that his apprenticeship was worded so as to bind him to them until his twenty-first birthday – and, because that birthday happens to be on 29 February (in a leap year), it means that technically only five birthdays have passed ("When you had left our pirate fold"), and he will not reach his twenty-first birthday until he is in his eighties. Frederic is convinced by this logic that he must rejoin the pirates, and thus he sees it as his duty to inform the Pirate King of the Major-General's deception. The outraged outlaw declares that their "revenge will be swift and terrible" ("Away, away, my heart's on fire").
Frederic meets Mabel, and she pleads with him to stay ("Stay Frederic, stay"), but he explains that he must fulfill his duty to the pirates until his 21st birthday in 1940. He promises to return then and claim her. They agree to be faithful to each other until then, though to Mabel "It seems so long", and Frederic departs. Mabel steels herself ("No, I'll be brave") and tells the police that they must go alone to face the pirates. They muse that an outlaw might be just like any other man, and it is a shame to deprive him of "that liberty which is so dear to all" ("When a felon's not engaged in his employment"). The police hide on hearing the approach of the pirates ("A rollicking band of pirates we"), who have stolen onto the grounds, meaning to avenge themselves for the Major-General's lie ("With cat-like tread").
The police and the pirates prepare for the fight. Just then, the Major-General appears, sleepless with guilt, and the pirates also hide, while General Stanley listens to the soothing sighing of the breeze. The girls come looking for him The pirates leap to the attack, and the police rush to the defence; but the police are easily defeated, and the Pirate King urges the captured Major-General to prepare for death. The Sergeant plays his trump card, demanding that the pirates yield "in Queen Victoria's name"; the pirates, overcome with loyalty to their Queen, do so. Ruth appears and reveals that the orphan pirates are in fact "all noblemen who have gone wrong". The Major-General is impressed by this and all is forgiven. Frederic and Mabel are reunited, and the Major-General is happy to marry his daughters to the noble pirates after all."
I have no clue if you even decided to read all of that, but I didn't feel like trying to do a synopsis of it! ;) Now since I have been to an outdoor play, I would like to go to a drive-in movie!
xoxo
CCR