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How To Use Follies In A Sentence

  • After light's term, a term of cecity: the best hope for the future, that light will return and banish the follies, sophistries, delusions, which have accumulated in the darkness. Matthew Arnold
  • He was 15 when he saw his first Broadway production, Follies, and 32 years later he can still recall every moment ‘scene by scene.’
  • But leave to others these niceties, 'whether they are to be described as follies or absurdities: Gorgias
  • In the harsh vanity of her conscious capableness and young strength she thought thus, half forgetting her own follies, and half excusing them on the ground of inexperience. The Old Wives' Tale
  • Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 
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  • She is not the woman for whose be-dazzlement I must advertise the value of my goods by sweating sonnets to her, or shivering serenades at her, or perpetuating follies for her. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • Pensioners are being rack-rated to pay for the follies of this foolish Government.
  • It sounded a little dry for my liking — I was kind of imagining the sort of intellectualist discourse that made the Mundane SF movement sound awfully stuffy, with their pshawing at pulp “follies”. Ethics and Enthusiasm
  • I would have been very sorry indeed to have missed the latest reincarnation of the Stephen Sondheim musical Follies.
  • Most fantastic and, as it proved, most disastrous of all the follies of Versailles, was the creation of the free city of Danzig and what was called the Polish Corridor. The Shape of Things to Come
  • Read _Romeo and Juliet_; — all is youth and spring; — youth with its follies, its virtues, its precipitancies; — spring with its odours, its flowers, and its transiency; it is one and the same feeling that commences, goes through, and ends the play. Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Beaumont and Fletcher
  • Thou think'st them to o'ertake, Thou thinkest to overtake them, for all thou'rt fettered fast; while thou bearest Thy sins from thy desire Follies, which slay thee whatso do hinder thee, perdie. way thou farest. The Life of Sir Richard Burton
  • A broad panorama of the triumphs and follies of humanity, an exploration of the quirks of the mind, of the nobility but more often the meanness and sheer malevolence of human nature, the collection was knit together by a web of self-consistent thinking, a skein of ideas woven from a lifetime of close reasoning on life, art, and literature. William hazlitt | the man of letters « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • Giovanni, married a dissolute woman of low birth called Livia, and disgraced the name of Medici by the unprincely follies of his life. Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 The Catholic Reaction
  • It was in vain to argue the tyranny of some husbands, when he could turn upon us the follies of some wives; and that wives and daughters were never more faulty, more undomestic, than at present; and when we were before a judge, who, though he could not be absolutely unpolite, would not flatter us, nor spare our foibles. Sir Charles Grandison
  • 8 The experience of so many princes, whom he had esteemed or endured, from the vain follies of Elagabalus to the useful rigor of Aurelian, taught him to form a just estimate of the duties, the dangers, and the temptations of their sublime station. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Not the less soured by these multiplied causes of irritation, from the reflection that they were attributable to his own follies and vices, he gave full scope to his resentments, and indulged himself in expressions of angry reproach against what he termed the ingratitude of his country, which provoked those around him, and gave great offense to Congress. Life and Times of Washington
  • History is little more than the register of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind. History and Historians. Edward Gibbon 
  • The follies of youth are food for repentance in old age. 
  • While the teens spend a lost weekend in the countryside, the director makes lazy points about the follies of youth.
  • He bitterly denounced the administration of that pure Democrat, James Madison, and ridiculed what he termed the follies of Thomas Jefferson. Americanism Contrasted with Foreignism, Romanism, and Bogus Democracy in the Light of Reason, History, and Scripture; In which Certain Demagogues in Tennessee, and Elsewhere, are Shown Up in Their True Colors
  • Along with Follies, the festival screens Wiseman's Law and Order and Domestic Violence.
  • True enough, Deacon, we're not about to start throwing stones at the political follies of one's youth.
  • The greater aristocracy built up their estates, often in several counties, and protected them from the follies of spendthrift heirs by the entail or strict settlement.
  • Presenting Hav as a fascinating nexus of East and West, a teeming entrepôt of cross-breeding cultures, Ms. Morris describes the architecture with great relish: There are mosques from brief Arab rule during the Crusades, Russian onion-domed palaces, colonial remnants from the post-Napoleonic "Hav Britannica," and "the most cheerful of follies," a multistoried pagoda built by 15th-century Ming Dynasty traders. Visiting a Land Beyond Fodor's Reach
  • Love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit. 
  • Read 'Romeo and Juliet'; -- all is youth and spring; -- youth with its follies, its virtues, its precipitancies; -- spring with its odours, its flowers, and its transiency; it is one and the same feeling that commences, goes through, and ends the play. Literary Remains, Volume 2
  • The Internet is rife with "gainer" blogs, plus dating sites and discussion forums that glorify big bodies, with names such as Fatnesse Follies, Growing Larger, BiggerCity. com and BellyBuilders. com. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • Brandt's fools as contemptible and loathsome, and say what he calls follies might be better described as sins and vices. History of English Humour, Vol. 1 (of 2) With an Introduction upon Ancient Humour
  • It's a good idea to show the follies of socialism in pictorial form and he does have some good pictures.
  • Emma Clifford comes direct to the national tour of Chicago from playing ‘Young Salle’ in the recent London production of Follies.
  • And thus it came about that she ceased to grow indignant at Branwell's follies; she made up her mind to accept with angerless sorrow his natural vices. Emily Brontë
  • It included rock gardens, grottoes, ferneries, follies, fountains, garden ornaments, bridges and even ornate ceilings. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was, in short, one of those respectable links that connect the coxcombs of the present day with those of the last age, and could compare, in his own experience, the follies of both. Saint Ronan's Well
  • As nothing is so successful a subject for ridicule as the fashionable follies of the time, it occurred to him that the more serious scenes of his narrative might be relieved by the humour of a cavaliero of the age of Queen Elizabeth. The Monastery
  • Love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit. 
  • Despite these follies, the kind of foregrounding that he has attempted in course of the present series of essays is immensely praiseworthy. Richard Carlson with a pinch of salt
  • Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 
  • One of the persistent follies of human nature is to imagine true happiness is just out of reach. Times, Sunday Times
  • The most pernicious is Proposition 25, which is being sold as a good government measure to end the state's annual fiscal follies and pass a budget on time. The Tax Me More State
  • But what saves it from saccharine sentimentality is that Meany is used as a means of exposing not just the hypocrisies of small town life but the larger follies of post-war America.
  • But the splendor of wit cannot outdazzle the calm daylight, which always shows every individual man in balance with his age, and able to work out his own salvation from all the follies of that, and no such glaring contrasts or severalties in that or this. Uncollected Prose
  • The follies of youth are food for repentance in old age. 
  • The women, now much older, reminisce, rekindle old friendships, open old wounds, and perform some of their Follies numbers.
  • On balance, however, Mulligan paints a picture of great architectural variety and reveals many hidden treasures such as octagonal boathouses, a gothic mausoleum, old lime kilns, follies and mill buildings.
  • They are imbrued with the follies of youth.
  • Mingle in their follies, and see they cover not deeper designs under the appearance of female levity — if they do mine, do thou countermine. The Abbot
  • She has grown out of her youth follies.
  • To the average young whippersnapper of today, this would be most risible, but I care not for the follies of youth.
  • Drag Follies will be showing at the Arts Theatre Club in Patterson Street until May 28.
  • The greatest scientists have mixed insight amounting to genius with the most absurd follies at other times.
  • Nobody likes Micawber less for his follies; and Dickens liked his father more, the more he recalled his whimsical qualities. Criticisms and Interpretations. II. By John Forster
  • Having given these deadlines the stamp of policy, they develop a sort of inexorability of their own, as if some omniscient force had taken charge, as if some higher power had taken over to save us from our follies. Dr. Charles G. Cogan: Deadlines "R" Us
  • ‘I'm one of the lucky ones,’ she says of performing in the Follies.
  • Gibson has a good eye for the follies of characters like a partygoer whoadvises another on how to cope withwith a dull guest: “Tune her out by counting her pores.” Tanya Egan Gibson’s ‘How to Buy a Love of Reading’ — A Satirical Novel That Turns Into a Teen Weepie « One-Minute Book Reviews
  • Right now, there was nothing to do but mope over her past follies and errors.
  • In the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a vogue for the building of follies on the estates of landowners.
  • The follies of youth are food for repentance in old age. 
  • Dr. HAYGARTH, who was so conspicuous in exposing the follies of Perkinism, was among the very earliest to express his opinion in favor of vaccination. Medical Essays, 1842-1882
  • (Pause, during which Gwendolen made several interpretations of her own speech.) "What do you call follies? Daniel Deronda
  • I recalled seeing him in a private screening of ‘Pep Follies of 1930,’ strumming his vulgar ukulele and screeching ‘Good Night Sweetheart.’
  • It is one of the follies of youth, indeed of all ages.
  • 'I'm confessed and shriven of all manner of follies,' said Elis sturdily, 'that among them. A Caregiver's Homage To The Very Old
  • History is little more than the register of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind. History and Historians. Edward Gibbon 
  • Several letters from Thomas, and from correspondents in Spain and Marseilles, “induced me to believe he had discarded all his follies,” Morris wrote later, “& I determined to win him to the pursuit of his own good, by placing an intire confidence in him.” Robert Morris
  • The greatest scientists have mixed insight amounting to genius with the most absurd follies at other times.
  • How touchingly expressive are the succeeding lines, wrung from a heart which all the trials and temptations and buffetings of the world could not render worldly; which, amid a thousand follies and errors of the head, still retained its childlike innocence; and which, doomed to struggle on to the last amid the din and turmoil of the metropolis, had ever been cheating itself with a dream of rural quiet and seclusion: The Life of Oliver Goldsmith
  • But, the theatre-goer can excuse its follies, because it is so darn rich in its layers elsewhere. 3:10 to Yuma…Russel Crowe action thriller entertains! « Julian Ayrs & Pop Culture
  • From his creation of the Follies that bore his name and reflected his twin passions for female pulchritude and spectacular stagecraft to his swan song as producer of the first great modern musical, Show Boat, Ziegfeld transformed burlesque into a new kind of American musical theater. Cover to Cover
  • I intended to convey that our charming host and hostess were superior to the follies of fashion, and preferred leading a simple and wholesome life to gadding about to twopenny-halfpenny tea-drinking afternoons, and living above their incomes.
  • Presenting Hav as a fascinating nexus of East and West, a teeming entrepôt of cross-breeding cultures, Ms. Morris describes the architecture with great relish: There are mosques from brief Arab rule during the Crusades, Russian onion-domed palaces, colonial remnants from the post-Napoleonic "Hav Britannica," and "the most cheerful of follies," a multistoried pagoda built by 15th-century Ming Dynasty traders. Visiting a Land Beyond Fodor's Reach
  • So that if there be any beetlehead or grosse person, the better to allure and prouoke him to those follies, they tell him by a common Prouerbe: That he must go to Valencia. The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1
  • Stuff and nonsense all these globes and powders, with all the other follies of the cabala and the spagyric art. The Queen Pedauque
  • Scandals in high life, starvation in low life; foul floods of nastiness in Law Courts; muddy tricklings of misery in lawless alleys; crimes so terrible and revolting; pains so pitiless and cureless; follies so selfish and wanton, that he let the journal drop, and fell back in his chair, appalled. Punch, Or The London Charivari, Volume 102, Jan. 2, 1892
  • Merrick offered a revealing critique of Stephen Sondheim's high-concept Follies, a musical about ageing showgirls in midlife crisis.
  • Such is the delight that people take in seeking out follies at weekends that the Fellowship has quickly gathered momentum.
  • Political blunders and economic follies are depressing the Japanese economy.
  • Learn wisdom by the follies of others. 
  • When Stephen Sondheim's Follies arrived in 1971, we critics were pretty obtuse about it.
  • It was beauty that was natural and artificial at once, and the blend created this flower child of the Follies.
  • But Spielberg's strong sense of nostalgia and his increasing sense of irony makes Follies, a forever ‘troubled’ show, a perfect match.
  • The follies which a man regrets most, in his life, are those which he didn't commit when he had the opportunity. Helen Rowland 
  • When Bernadette Peters's character, Sally Plummer—a diminished, out-of-love housewife—arrived to the reunion in a bright-red dress, some "Follies" purists felt she looked too va-va-voom. 'Follies' Costume Drama
  • We are full of weakness and errors; let us mutually pardon each other for our follies.
  • To the average young whippersnapper of today, this would be most risible, but I care not for the follies of youth.
  • The humorist kept the balance of satire by laughing at his own follies and doings.
  • And gie him a bit word of counsel from time to time, should ye see him temptit to whilly-whas and follies? Copper Streak Trail
  • From his creation of the Follies that bore his name and reflected his twin passions for female pulchritude and spectacular stagecraft to his swan song as producer of the first great modern musical, Show Boat, Ziegfeld transformed burlesque into a new kind of American musical theater. Cover to Cover
  • Having spent four years restoring the cottage, it is now home, from where Richard works as a woodworker making timber buildings and follies.
  • Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 
  • Later it made me think of follies built in the gardens of the English houses of the rich and often featuring in Agatha Christie plays.
  • Thy sins from thy desire Follies, which slay thee whatso do hinder thee, perdie. way thou farest. The Life of Sir Richard Burton
  • Rops's entire oeuvre is informed by a satiric and sardonic eye for the follies of the world.
  • III. i.91 (69,1) [follies doth emmew] Forces follies to lie in cover without daring to show themselves. Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies
  • The philosophic pessimist is not a fretful and malignant caviller who sneers at the follies of others because he thinks himself so much wiser than they. Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde"; an essay on the Wagnerian drama
  • Learn wisdom by the follies of others. 
  • `The Austrians love their follies, playing jokes on nature. THE SOUND OF MURDER
  • It throws light on a fantastic plan to animate the promenade of the resort by building a series of four giant follies.
  • She told a reporter, ‘When I was nineteen, I thought Botticelli was unbeautiful because the women in the Primavera did not look like the girls in the Follies.’
  • Instead of going back to the chorus, she took to the road, playing the lead roles in classic musicals like Can-Can, Gypsy, and Follies.
  • “Over heavens forbode, my Lady!” answered Lilias; “I have lived too long with gentles, I praise my stars for it, to fight with either follies or fantasies, whether they relate to beast, bird, or boy.” The Abbot
  • By the end of “Follies of Science,” any modern technologist is bound to start wondering: Are our current predictions about the future any smarter than the endless parade of goofiness and gullibility that “Follies of Science” gleefully enumerates? Predictions that Never Came True | Impact Lab
  • By cynically playing on the follies of various discontented peers and MPs, he builds a faction round the marquis.
  • D'agger's starting her Peek-a-Boo Presents Funny Farm Follies Aug. 18 at Tin Angel. The Clog
  • Experience equips you with a series of conditioned reflexes which can protect you from some of the more egregious follies, like changing a light bulb while standing in bath water or cutting your toe-nails with garden shears.
  • The humorist kept the balance of satire by laughing at his own follies and doings.
  • Thou mayst perchance have seen me also have a fancy to play at trap-ball, or to kiss a serving wench, or to guzzle ale and eat toasted cheese in a porterly whimsy; but is it fitting thou shouldst remember such follies? Peveril of the Peak
  • The greatest scientists have mixed insight amounting to genius with the most absurd follies at other times.
  • Her sister Doris had been employed to rehearse a group of dancing girls for a road show of the Follies for producer Ned Wayburn.
  • 1305: Nips youth i'th head, and follies doth emmew Measure For Measure (1623 First Folio Edition)
  • A real opposition to statism in both its welfarist and militarist guises is resurgent and it finds itself in a target-rich environment full of follies to lampoon, lambaste, and expose.
  • Well, at least the stuff will be exhausted now by these follies of Gladstone's... But I have failed. ANTI-ICE
  • Love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit. 
  • At present, architectural production often seems to be of two quite dissimilar kinds: sheds and follies.
  • It was also from Ruisdael that 18 th-century Britain inherited its love of gothic ruins and haunted follies.
  • Thou mayst perchance have seen me also have a fancy to play at trap - ball, or to kiss a serving wench, or to guzzle ale and eat toasted cheese in a porterly whimsy; but is it fitting thou shouldst remember such follies? Peveril of the Peak
  • He has his follies, I have mine; and the less either of us sees of the other's peccadilloes, the greater will be the honour and respect -- that, I think, is the proper phrase -- I say the _respect_ in which we shall hold each other. The Fortunes of Nigel
  • The Lismore Theatre Company presents the Rochdale Follies - a wonderful evening of humour and song performed by some of our top local talent.
  • He called his iniquitous vices, follies -- his licentiousness, love of pleasure -- his unprincipled expenditure and extravagance, a want of the knowledge of what money was: and his worst sin of all, because the one least likely to be abandoned, his positive, unyielding damning selfishness, he called "fashion" -- the fashion of the young men of the day. The Kellys and the O'Kellys
  • Disposed to talk, she lingered as long as possible, but Harvey Munden had no leanings to this kind of colloquy; when the girl took herself off, he drew a breath of satisfaction, and smiled the smile of an intellectual man who has outlived youthful follies. The House of Cobwebs and Other Stories
  • Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 
  • The follies of youth are food for repentance in old age. 
  • The depression wiped out not only the Follies, but also the Vaudeville touring circuit.
  • Love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit. 
  • A great portion of the errors and mistakes, and of what we call the follies, of children arise from simple ignorance. Gentle Measures in the Management and Training of the Young Or, the Principles on Which a Firm Parental Authority May Be Established and Maintained, Without Violence or Anger, and the Right Development of the Moral and Mental Capacities Be Promoted by Met
  • ‘There is more fun at Corke Lodge’ writes Jane Powers, The Irish Times, where ‘the "ancient garden" of box parterres is punctuated by melancholy gothic follies, and emerges eerily from the dense boskage of evergreen oaks, myrtles, and a writhing cork oak tree with deeply corrugated bark.’
  • The Authors seemed to search for Opportunities to introduce hints and sarcastical Allusions to the frivolities, Vanity, Affectation, follies and prejudices of their own Nation. John Adams autobiography, part 2, "Travels, and Negotiations," 1777-1778
  • Almost complete ignorance of past follies leads to repeats of the same errors. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nottingham Contemporary, to 11 MarRobert ClarkDavid Shrigley has achieved world fame thanks to his blackly funny greetings cards, skewering mankind's follies with scrappy felt-tipped cartoons. This week's new exhibitions
  • His eight models are absurdist and visionary monuments to human, societal, and governmental follies, abominations, and questionable policies.
  • Bomb making and inciting riots hardly qualify as youthful follies.
  • Some follies, however, do not provide suitable accommodation or are simply too small.
  • To judge, however, by the ardor with which he worked, he was engaged in some one of those schemes that are termed follies before success, but which, after success, are universally acknowledged to be brilliant and praiseworthy instances of industrial enterprise. Willis the Pilot
  • He called his iniquitous vices, follies his licentiousness, love of pleasure his unprincipled expenditure and extravagance, a want of the knowledge of what money was: and his worst sin of all, because the one least likely to be abandoned, his positive, unyielding damning selfishness, he called ‘fashion’ the fashion of the young men of the day. The Kellys and the O'Kellys
  • D'agger's starting her Peek-a-Boo Presents Funny Farm Follies Aug. nike shox on January 21st 2010 9: 32 PM (12 days ago) The Clog
  • Wildly elaborate architectural follies, ruins and waterworks are featured in two 1982 drawings, both titled Haunted Village.
  • It is not the result of the wickedness or follies of the Gentiles which we call anti-Semitism. The Chosen Peoples
  • There Wright filled the grounds with follies, grottoes, and garden buildings in the rustic, Gothic, and Palladian styles.
  • It just seems so strange to us that the country of garden follies culturally mediated engagement with nature and history, the grided architecture of metes and bounds, and the literary invented landscapes of the Lakes District could still be having problems negotiating between the manmade and the natural and between authentic experience and drive-by tourism. Archive 2008-09-01
  • They threw everything into the furnace, their comfort, they cut down their follies and their boys and girls and old men and old women went to work in munition works. The One Thing Needful
  • It is time that divine help stepped in and coached Hollywood on the follies of shoddy impersonation, and even worse, blatant colloquialism of all verbal history.
  • Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 
  • Thus are great national follies pumped until they burst. Times, Sunday Times
  • I've been very interested in biofuels for thirty years, and one of the great follies of the whole ethanol bubble was that everyone was building new distilleries but nobody bothered to build an infrastructure to get that ethanol to customers. Bio-default (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • The follies of youth are food for repentance in old age. 
  • First, the ordinary citizen and voter must acquire a greater awareness of his own nature, his liability to certain follies, ever recurrent and ever disastrous; secondly, a greater knowledge of the nature of the necessary mechanism of society; and thirdly, of the nature of truth, of true methods of interpretation, the means by which the lessons told by common facts can be applied to the solution of social problems as they arise. Sir Norman Angell - Nobel Lecture
  • It'll dae weel eneuch for thae dissentin 'bodies, wi' their prayer-books, but what hae we, wi 'the psalm-buik, an' a regular ministry, an 'a regular kirk, to dae wi' siclike follies? St. Cuthbert's
  • Of him whose creation is sufficient to render the year 1849 memorable in the annals of the land much has ere now been written -- that type of a well-to-do British householder, delightful for his follies and endearing by his pluck, something of a lunatic, it must be admitted, yet more of a sportsman, and most of all a "muff" -- _Punch's_ "simple-minded Philistine paterfamilias. The History of "Punch"
  • Unlike with previous friendly follies, Scotland were near to full strength in midweek.
  • Love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit. 
  • Palemon, to what exigence have thy Crimes and Follies reduced thee! The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen
  • The monument to the seventh Earl continued the tradition of follies and garden buildings begun in the 18th century.
  • But architecture was a different matter from furnishings or garden follies. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The Palace Grand Prize is the title of this year's instalment of the Gaslight Follies at the Palace Grand Theatre in Dawson City.
  • Brandt's fools are represented as contemptible and loathsome rather than _foolish_, and what he calls follies might be more correctly described as sins and vices. The Ship of Fools, Volume 1
  • Among what they called your monstrous follies, which was the worst, the most damnable? The Wandering Jew — Volume 06
  • Not the less soured by these multiplied causes of irritation, from the reflection that they were attributable to his own follies and vices, he gave full scope to his resentments, and indulged himself in expressions of angry reproach against what he termed the ingratitude of his country, which provoked those around him, and gave great offense to Life and Times of Washington, Volume 2 Revised, Enlarged, and Enriched
  • Learn wisdom by the follies of others. 
  • Mismanagement and Follies of her past Life, now took up all her Thoughts; and as she was of a Disposition generous enough, when Vanity, Pride, or Love, did not oversway her, she resolved to undeceive Antonia, and use the utmost of her Endeavours to perswade her to turn the Current of her Affections, where both the Laws of God and Man required them, and henceforward banish all Desire but for her Husband. Idalia, or, The Unfortunate Mistress: A Novel
  • Learn wisdom by the follies of others. 
  • He smiled at the vain follies of the countess, and broke the seal of her letter. The Scottish Chiefs
  • a wheen sketching souls, that ye may see perched like craws on every craig in the country, e'en working at your ain trade, Maister Francie; forby men that had been in foreign parts, or said they had been there, whilk is a 'ane, ye ken; and maybe twa or three draggletailed misses, that wear my Leddy Penelope's follies when she has dune wi' them, as her queans of maids wear her second-hand claithes. St. Ronan's Well
  • It'll dae weel eneuch for thae dissentin 'bodies, wi' their prayer-books, but what hae we, wi 'the psalm-buik, an' a regular ministry, an 'a regular kirk, to dae wi' siclike follies? St. Cuthbert's
  • One day, my dear, you will learn to laugh with me at the follies of mankind. LION IN THE VALLEY
  • Minto adult skaters have performed in every edition of the Follies that has been presented.
  • Opening night for the Gaslight Follies is Saturday, May 18.

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