How To Use Welles In A Sentence

  • LOL FTW–he duz looka laik teh dyin citz kane aka orson welles! Et tu, … - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • The first Humphrey’s latitu-dinous baver with puggaree behind, (calaboose belong bigboss belong Kang the Toll) his fourinhand bow, his elbaroom surtout, the refaced unmansionables of gingerine hue, the state slate umbrella, his gruff woolselywellesly with the finndrinn knopfs and the gauntlet upon the hand which in an hour not for him solely evil had struck down the might he mighthavebeen d’Est-erre of whom his nation seemed almost already to be about to have need. Finnegans Wake
  • Like Harry Lime, the penicillin-diluting racketeer he plays in the film, Welles infects The Third Man from opening titles to closing credits.
  • A French, German, and Italian production that became another unprofitable film for Welles, the film was recently revived in a fully restored print.
  • When Touch of Evil was first announced, a documentary explaining and illustrating the changes that resulted from Welles' memo was to have been included with the DVD.
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  • The reason that I bothered with the argument of vowelless [mz] being pronounceable is simply that I do, in fluent speech, usually produce the vowelless [mz], and therefore wanted to explain the more objectionable position, figuring the vowelled pronunciation of Ms. could defend itself. “Ms.”-ing the point « Motivated Grammar
  • She accurately told the FBI that Welles was broke and that he was cheating on his wife, the beautiful movie star Rita Hayworth, with a string of starlets and showgirls.
  • Orson Welles was a child prodigy, too, and of course he developed a sort of monomania which kind of baulked his career. Why VARK leaves me in the DARK « We Don't Count Your Own Visits To Your Blog
  • It was a project that outlived the lead actor, and remained a work in progress for so many years that Welles eventually threatened to retitle it When Are You Going To Finish Don Quixote?
  • Gluttony, Orson Welles once said ruefully, is not a secret vice and unhappily the solution to weight loss is also blindingly obvious - whatever you eat, eat less.
  • First of all, the otherwise-unassailable movie (Orson Welles, Leonard Nimoy, Judd Nelson and Robert Stack — what could possibly go wrong?) introduced a thoroughly assailable character in Wheelie, a pre-pubescent robot man-child who talks in rhymes and turns into a bubbly alien car. The 5 most disappointing Transformer toys
  • Money was a problem for the sort of sets Welles wanted to use, but in the end he was able to film most of what he wanted at the abandoned Paris railway depot, the Gare d' Orsay.
  • Welles uses his own intimate vocal delivery, and an atmospheric soundscape, to prepare us for a final zinger that is both eerie and contemplative.
  • At 6 A.M., in the glory of the tropic sunrise, Mr. Maxwell and I landed in Province Wellesley, under the magnificent casuarina trees which droop in mournful grace over the sandy shore. The Golden Chersonese and the way thither
  • Well, we have trailers here, including the teaser and television spots narrated by Orson Welles.
  • Set in 1953 at Wellesley College, the film follows Stiles and her classmates on the brink of the feminist revolution.
  • Orson Welles managed to convince many Americans that they were being invaded by Martians.
  • The count is a merciless rogue who reminds me of Orson Welles in Citizen Kane, only more megalomaniacal.
  • But at the time media tycoon William Randolph Hearst was one of the most powerful men in the world, the man on whom Orson Welles based his classic opus Citizen Kane.
  • The mountainous Welles presides over a corner table in the company of his miniature poodle Kiki. Times, Sunday Times
  • And then Welles changes the ending, offering his own gimcrack conclusions about freedom and slavery that belie the unplumbed depths of the material.
  • Rather, they were theatrically trained actors Welles had assembled many years before with his partner and mentor, John Houseman .
  • The brooding rebel was, say the eulogists, like Orson Welles - too big for the splashy, widescreen, Technicolor movies of the 1950s.
  • Marianne V. Moore of Wellesley College says these areas, along with coastal waters, are at higher risk than other habitats in developed areas because they are unshielded and openly exposed to light.
  • As you know, the block that's being contemplated is a block south of Wellesley between Bay and Yonge. A Great City and Its Institutions
  • I did avoid a critical personal examination into my character by that bowelless committee, but I referred to all the people of high standing I could think of in the community who would be least likely to know anything about me. The Innocents Abroad
  • Touch of Evil is a fascinating film noir, rich in its cast, camerawork and sound - all orchestrated by Orson Welles.
  • Like Welles, Laughton had a face perfect for conveying sensuous depravity, with that overlarge lower lip doing half the work for him. The Mannionville Daily Gazettes Favorite Blog of the Day: Favorite Film Blogger Anniversary Edition
  • She sounds like she studied "ebonics" at Wellesly. Good Bill, Bad Hillary
  • Lincoln was fond of "Father Neptune," as the president called Gideon Welles, the white-bearded, absurdly bewigged former newspaper editor. Civil War Diaries, Blue and Gray
  • There are late medieval sculpted monuments in the cathedral, as well as the altar tomb effigy of Bishop Wellesley who died in 1539.
  • Sir Arthur Wellesley had now witnessed the assault of the breach at Seringapatam, had escaladed the walls of Ahmednuggur and swept over the great de fences of Gawilghur. Sharpe's Fortress
  • Miserable men commiserate not themselves, bowelless unto themselves, and merciless unto their own bowels. Letter to a Friend
  • But this is not thy doing: the bowelless fiend sends thee, poor simple girl, to me with this bait. The Cloister and the Hearth
  • Thou dwellest where the roses blow.
  • Welles stars in the central role as well as directs this atmospheric but flawed adaptation of the play. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the height of her career, Orson Welles dubbed her "the most exciting woman in the world".
  • In its scattergun invention and unsentimental broadness, it almost echoes Orson Welles’ work at its most playful.
  • admonitus locorum" was the monument of Wellesley, who lies here, having been consigned, at his own request, to the earth he had loved so well in life. A Visit To Eton
  • Misdirection is one of the prestidigitator's tools, after all, and Welles' flair for grotesquerie and offbeat humour are as much a part of the entertainment as the tortuous plot.
  • For some years Merrill served as an alumna trustee of Wellesley College.
  • Our bed, she adds, that inner retreat in which Thou dwellest in me, and which I call ours, that Thou mayst thereby be induced to come and give me there the nuptial kiss which I first asked of Thee, and which is my final end — our bed is ready, and adorned with the flowers of a thousand virtues. Song of Songs of Solomon / Explanations and Reflections having Reference to the Interior Life
  • Chiang Stumps Even Her Teacher, the reporter for The Christian Science Monitor listed indehiscence (a botanical term for the state of being closed at maturity), maunder (to move slowly and uncertainly), and cenote (a sinkhole) among a list of eight difficult words she had used, saying that even Wellesley professors had to consult their dictionaries. The Last Empress
  • Shot in locations ranging from Chelsea to Paris, Vienna to the Basque country, Welles proved a sharp but humble interviewer and boldly experimented with over-the-shoulder shots and "noddies" (response shots recorded separately from an interview then interwoven with the subject's answers), as well as location shooting, synchronised sound recording and handheld crime recreations. The Guardian World News
  • Callow wants to "deconstruct" the Welles story, see the real man who made himself a myth in cahoots with a pushover press. Citizen Welles
  • Asked to specify what he liked best, Caen said: Well there seemed to be a lot of Orson Welles's radio technique in it, it seemed to me: a lot of the effects he got on the . . . Rosebud and the Radio
  • Historically the territory of bullfighters, bandits, guerrillas and smugglers, this rocky region was doubtless seen by Welles as more akin to his buccaneering spirit than some genteel churchyard.
  • You're familiar with that, you know how Orson Welles upon arriving in Rio excited the local cultured, worldly cariocas [inhabitants of Rio de Janeiro, trans].
  • This is true even as film since Welles is capable of a quasi-realism indistinguishable from actuality.
  • Lord Fitzroy Somerset, eighth son of the duke of Beaufort, was appointed aide-de-camp to Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Wellesley, the future duke of Wellington, in 1808.
  • Kohl-Welles claim on Postman's blog of not knowing what was going on is remindful of Ashlee Simpson blowing her spot on "Saturday Night Live" and blaming her band. Sound Politics: Election reform proposals, with LBJ and Stalin smiling on
  • SCTV once did a brilliant episode set on New Year's Eve 1983 in which, as soon as the countdown hit zero, all programming became Orwellian, straight out of Nineteen Eighty-Four, with abundant newspeak and a still photo of Orson Welles as the face of Big Brother, glaring sternly from your "telescreen". Eric Williams: Right Like Me
  • In an unwary moment, French dragoons come so very narrowly to causing Wellesley great harm, prevented only by the heroic efforts of Sergeant Richard Sharpe.
  • When meeting the faculty at Wellesley, Roberts is artless enough to admit she has never been to Europe.
  • At the height of her career, Orson Welles dubbed her "the most exciting woman in the world".
  • Mr. Fassbender's lord of the cursed manor is worthy of his governess's love, even though he's no match for the one played by Timothy Dalton when it comes to bottomless despair or towering rage, and though he can't, or wisely won't, touch the doomy self-regard that Orson Welles brought to the role. See Jane Blossom: An Enthralling 'Eyre'
  • I did avoid a critical personal examination into my character, by that bowelless committee, but I referred to all the people of high standing I could think of in the community who would be least likely to know any thing about me. The innocents abroad, or, The new Pilgrim's progress
  • Yet Lincoln, according to Navy Secretary Gideon Welles, "took upon himself the whole blame—said it was carelessness, heedlessness on his part—he ought to have been more attentive. Lessons of Fort Sumter
  • He breathed fierce and honest anathema on the heads of the bowelless fiends who had abandoned the babe to its doom. The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol
  • People at the time were well aware how much the finished "Kane" owed to its director's broadcast work, says writer-producer-director Norman Corwin, an on-air colleague of Welles's in that golden age of the 1930s and '40s. Rosebud and the Radio
  • the quote I gave you or mentioned in the chapter is Welles' saying of John Ford.
  • If true, it not only shows how much Welles was asking for it, but it cheapens the movie somehow; it seems like very much the act of a 25 year old, thinking that reducing every motivation to sex constitutes a particular insight.
  • I don't think you can give Deadgirl a 7 and then turn around and give Orson Welles a 5 especially in a world where the wrestler is a 9. TIFF 2008 Wrap-Up | /Film
  • Welles is Hank Quindlen, police captain in the filthy town on the north side of the Mexican border.
  • In an age of too many minimalists, Orson Welles, Federico Fellini, and Ingmar Bergman were maximalists.
  • At the height of her career, Orson Welles dubbed her "the most exciting woman in the world".
  • Construed correctly, this clause of the sentence would mean -- '_I, sorrowfully leaving all places gracious to the Maenalian god_:' but _that_ is not what Lord Wellesley designed: '_I leaving the woods of Cyllene, and the snowy summits of Pholoe, places that are all of them dear to Pan_' -- _that_ is what was meant: that is to say, not _leaving all places dear to Pan_, far from it; but _leaving a few places, every one of which is dear to Pan_. Note Book of an English Opium-Eater
  • Seward was "meddlesome" toward other departments; "runs to the President two or three times a day; wants to be Premier," etc., says Welles. The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln A Narrative And Descriptive Biography With Pen-Pictures And Personal Recollections By Those Who Knew Him
  • After fifty years, two hundred sculpted trees occupied three sloping acres at the shore of Lake Waban in Wellesley.
  • However, its interest to scholars - who, following the manuscript's purchase by La Musée des Lettres et Manuscrits in Paris, will be able to study the work - is not proportionate to its size. 's 19 pages is a vivid tale of murder and madness entitled "A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley", which includes an episode prefiguring one of the most famous scenes in fiction: when Jane Eyre's Bertha - the so-called "madwoman in the attic" - sets fire to her husband Mr Rochester's bed. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • He had escaladed Ahmednuggur, surprising its defenders by sending men with ladders against the unbreached walls, and Dodd was certain that Wellesley would similarly try to rush the Inner Fort. Sharpe's Fortress
  • The young man followed, and in the next moment found himself in the bowelless body of the tree itself; into which, on the side of the encampment, both light and sound were admitted by a small aperture formed by the natural decay of the wood. Wacousta : a tale of the Pontiac conspiracy (Complete)
  • What I'd prefer is that the filmmakers sink just a little dough into Welles's not-quite-finished unreleased 1970s feature starring John Huston titled "The Other Side of the Wind. Orson Welles to Narrate 3D Holiday Film | /Film
  • It was the first movie by Welles, who bucked studio and storytelling conventions to craft a landmark film about the rise and fall of a William Randolph Hearst-like newspaper publisher.
  • I think we can safely assume that Lweton's early days with Orson Welles informed his use of low-angled, steam and mist filled set ups, and the film does evince a stylistic fluidity, which is absent in some of the more literary films. The Ghost Ship
  • It had been an audacious notion, the idea that Wellesley would accept the hard-working little Jewish girl with the Cuban heels and the father in burlesque and the New York apartment (by then, there was a Latin Quarter in Times Square) that her mother had decorated in pale yellow and lavender brocade, “like a huge Easter egg.” The Uses of Enchantment
  • If I don’t believe in auteur theory, why am I obsessing on Orson Welles’ masterful technique? Orson’s Wellies « We Don't Count Your Own Visits To Your Blog
  • Thief and pirate should he prove henceforth; no more nor less; as bowelless, as remorseless, as all those others who had deserved those names. Captain Blood
  • Welles, as Harry Lime, has only a short amount of screen time - little more than a cameo - but of course he steals it.
  • The mountainous Welles presides over a corner table in the company of his miniature poodle Kiki. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Wellesley Network lives: Hillary's classmate Janice Piercy recently left her post with the MacArthur Foundation in Chicago to codirect the Clinton transition team's talent search. THE INNER CIRCLE
  • A major strength of the book is Glover's ability to intersperse the action of conflict with quotes from the common soldier and Wellesley himself.
  • Orson Welles once said, ‘A work of art is good inasmuch as it reflects the person who created it.’
  • Miserable men commiserate not themselves, bowelless unto others, and merciless unto their own bowels. Christian Morals
  • At the height of her career, Orson Welles dubbed her "the most exciting woman in the world".
  • This cluster of tightly interrelated themes - power, ego, control, megalomania, failure - were to give a strong pattern to Welles' creations, just as they later did for Werner Herzog.
  • It was the first movie by Welles, who bucked studio and storytelling conventions to craft a landmark film about the rise and fall of a William Randolph Hearst-like newspaper publisher.
  • She attended Wellesley College where she was the first student to deliver the graduation address.
  • The Orson Welles broadcast of a four-decade-old H.G. Wells novel was so convincing that horrified listeners peered skyward for glimpses of tentacled invaders arriving in their war machines.
  • But it's a movie dominated by Orson Welles - "tyro" and "enfant terrible" of the American theater. SplicedFeed
  • Orson Welles's Othello "waded through the great speeches, pausing before the stronger words like a landing craft breasting a swell. A challenging role for a complex thespian
  • Sixteen years after his birth in Kenosha, Orson Welles tramps to Dublin, then one of the world’s great theatrical centers. Orson Agonistes
  • At the height of her career, Orson Welles dubbed her "the most exciting woman in the world".
  • On the way back to Washington, Welles got quite drunk and propositioned the porter for gay sex, offering money. A Short History of Political Suicide
  • Don't snicker: Christian McKay's Welles impersonation is so accurate as to be spooky, and despite the film's obligatory (albeit charming) rom-com trappings, I've never seen a backstage movie that was truer to the experience of putting on a show. Relishing a Lost Production
  • Although the Monitor was just one of three prototypical iron warships launched in mid-1862, its success at Hampton Roads beclouded Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles’ and other top-ranking naval officials’ thinking.
  • Emperor Charles V. and, so, half-brother to the bowelless King Philip The Historical Nights' Entertainment Second Series
  • bowelless readiness to take advantage
  • It is a small scene to be sure, but perhaps the most important one in unlocking the famous “Rosebud” mystery of Orson Welles’ masterpiece and one of the greatest films ever made. Eric’s Top 10 Defining Christmas Moments » Scene-Stealers
  • Welles plays the head of a witches coven, who has his heart set on raising his son from the dead.
  • Much has been written of the ingenious use made by this novice moviemaker of all the technical resources at a Hollywood movie studio, which Welles called "the biggest electric train set a boy ever had. Rosebud and the Radio
  • She came to The University of Chicago from Wellesley College to become the dean of women.
  • Orson Wellescreated moremass hysteria over aliensvia radio-broadcast; andhe did it by accident! The Fourth Kind (2009)
  • It says something about our cultural scene that Welles after his death can be both monumentalized and trivialized.
  • With Lindburg-esque gusto you shall throw yourself upon this pile of sizzling meat like a feral child raised by wolverines and Liberals and you shall also smoke ten unfiltered cigarettes back to back in a plume of nicotine and fatty meat that shall incant the spirit of the late Orson Welles. The Outback Steakhouse Is The Greatest Place On The Face Of The Earth | Manolith
  • Chef Ming Tsai uses lapsang souchong at home and in the kitchen of his Wellesley, Mass. restaurant, Blue Ginger, as a stock for rice, a fuel for wok-smoked poussin and in a versatile chipotle-inspired tea-and-chile spice rub. Tea's Got a Brand New Bag
  • And then there was Orson Welles Square, a memorial to the corpulent director who filmed his Cannes-winning Othello here in 1949.
  • Princess Diana's family, the Spencers, began as graziers; the Grevels, who later poshed up their name to the more Norman-sounding Greville just as Wesley became Wellesley were dealers in fleeces. In the Realm of Peers
  • The reason that I bothered with the argument of vowelless [mz] being pronounceable is simply that I do, in fluent speech, usually produce the vowelless [mz], and therefore wanted to explain the more objectionable position, figuring the vowelled pronunciation of Ms. could defend itself. “Ms.”-ing the point « Motivated Grammar
  • Welles did indeed have enemies, although he had done his best to earn their enmity.
  • In 1957, Orson Welles finished filming his last American film, a lurid and misanthropical thriller, Touch of Evil.
  • The men were mostly Swiss, but with a leavening from the German states, and they were a sober, steady battalion that Wellesley planned to lead to the Inner Palace to protect its contents and its harem from the ravages of the attackers. Sharpe's Tiger
  • Wellesley at the head of the 19th Dragoons charging the Mahratta The Newcomes
  • Province Wellesley, under a row of magnificent casuarina trees, with gray, feathery foliage drooping over a beach of corals and, behind which are the solemn glades of cocoa-nut groves. The Golden Chersonese and the way thither
  • My generation's first exposure to Agnes Moorehead wasn't her work for Orson Welles, but when she was well into her 60s and perfecting the waspish put-down of her daughter's attempts at domesticity on a weekly basis in Bewitched. Spotted: an older woman on screen
  • Misdirection is one of the prestidigitator's tools, after all, and Welles' flair for grotesquerie and offbeat humour are as much a part of the entertainment as the tortuous plot.
  • She accurately told the FBI that Welles was broke and that he was cheating on his wife, the beautiful movie star Rita Hayworth, with a string of starlets and showgirls.
  • It was the first movie by Welles, who bucked studio and storytelling conventions to craft a landmark film about the rise and fall of a William Randolph Hearst-like newspaper publisher.
  • She attended Wellesley College where she was the first student to deliver the graduation address.

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