Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

156 Sentences With "warmhearted"

How to use warmhearted in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "warmhearted" and check conjugation/comparative form for "warmhearted". Mastering all the usages of "warmhearted" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"He's coming at it from a warmhearted, generous place," she said.
It's a coldblooded human who doesn't love a warmhearted horse story.
Even the underdog nominee The Band's Visit was a warmhearted movie first.
"The party is warmhearted," the guard said, declining to give his name.
Maybe what's most bootylicious in this novel is Zink's warmhearted embrace of her subjects.
PARELES Elbow's best-known songs are stately, warmhearted reflections on love, family and memories.
His "Three Tenors" colleague, Plácido Domingo, appears as a warmhearted talking head in the film.
Some of this is probably innate; she's not the most warmhearted person you ever met.
But on Sunday, at least, there were signs of the warmhearted girl we all remember.
She is warmhearted, a whirlwind and a wit … but an unconscious snob and a hypocrite.
My little brother is the most warmhearted, one of the smartest people I&aposve ever met.
Ms. Quillen calls her father forgiving, a warmhearted person, someone who can make anyone feel good.
"The Most Fun We Ever Had," the first novel by Claire Lombardo, is a sweeping, warmhearted family story.
Warmhearted and perhaps imaginary adventures ensue, facilitated by the father's identical twin (played by the always engaging Chris Diamantopoulos).
It became "Full House," the warmhearted comedy about a widower raising his young daughters with the help of two bachelors.
A recording on the Dynamic label, derived from a 2009 revival, in Verona, reveals a warmhearted score, rich in mischief.
The kitchen will look like the set of a warmhearted dramedy about a dad who writes about food for a living.
Johnny Hallyday, who died last week at age 74, was by all accounts generous and warmhearted, and an undeniably charismatic showman.
And ordinary Colombians routinely give food to hungry Venezuelans on the street; the world has much to learn from warmhearted Colombians.
This is kid-book humor at its best, both warmhearted and frisky — the kind that leaves adults, too, cracking up and grateful.
Harvey adopts a tone of tenacious yet warmhearted mockery in his new exhibition of paintings and ceramics at the Jerwood Gallery in Hastings.
The special effects of this warmhearted adventure movie were unfortunately inadequate when it was first released; they can only seem more cartoonish now.
"Stranger Things" has been one of Netflix's most reliably entertaining series, with its blockbuster production values, clever '80s nostalgia and warmhearted adolescent camaraderie.
" In Brussels, Cecilia Malmstrom, the European commissioner for trade, told reporters that the bloc's relationship with the United States had become "less warmhearted.
" To those who understood him deeply, Mr. Kalish said, Mr. Zukofsky was "very gentle and very kind and very warmhearted and very witty.
Newspapers in the 23th century tended to take a warmhearted human-interest approach to stuck trains, emphasizing plucky heroism and triumph over nature.
"Neruda," Pablo Larraín's semifantastical biopic, is a warmhearted film about a hot-blooded man that is nonetheless troubled by a subtle, perceptible chill.
But those who knew Mr. Wichs, who immigrated to the United States from Czechoslovakia as a teenager, remembered a fundamentally humble and warmhearted man.
Neighborhood: Palermo, Avenida Medrano 1475 Federico Cuco is the owner of this whimsical and warmhearted bar, which is named after the author Jules Verne.
Thoughtful and warmhearted, his fiction has the engaging quality of tales told by a friend, over drinks, about a person we know in common.
The trio then played gentle, warmhearted, slowly unspooling music, each piece inspired by a different poem, as Young sat with them in the studio.
The trio then played gentle, warmhearted, slowly unspooling music, each piece inspired by a different poem, as Young sat with them in the studio.
It's dotted with faint touches of magical realism that befit its South American locale, and many of them are warmhearted surprises: Balloon-ship houses!
The Good Place, with its lovely cast, best known for roles in warmhearted comedies, presents itself as a fun place to spend half an hour.
"The Humans" was warmhearted, sharply observed and often laugh-out-loud funny, funny enough to forgive Haig's alien his regrettable fondness for fortune-cookie philosophy.
"The Score" is no "Friday Night Lights," but it succeeds on its own more prosaic terms as a credible and warmhearted but spiky family drama.
O. Scott) 'ALMOST CHRISTMAS' (PG-63693, 63683:63673) A flimsy story line doesn't much matter to this warmhearted and often spectacularly funny holiday comedy-drama.
O. Scott) 'ALMOST CHRISTMAS' (PG-13, 1:72) A flimsy story line doesn't much matter to this warmhearted and often spectacularly funny holiday comedy-drama.
Internet users in China have in recent days reported problems posting references to the warmhearted bear of A.A. Milne's children's books on social media sites.
That's because Jane the Virgin has always stayed grounded in the emotional reality of its characters, and especially that of warmhearted, bright-eyed Jane (Gina Rodriguez).
The Fox sitcom is reliably silly, warmhearted, and very funny, but it wasn't a stretch to assume that its October 17 episode would be particularly good.
Another film, "Two Turtle Doves," by Sarah Montana, is a warmhearted love story between a grieving neuroscientist (Nikki DeLoach) and a widowed estate lawyer (Michael Rady).
" Anne Friedman, a longtime friend of Mr. Liberty, said, "Georgie is everything Chid ever wanted in a woman: She's beautiful and fashionable, warmhearted, God-loving and philanthropic.
That seems indicative of the world we're living in — a movie about a warmhearted but still often caustic journalist like Molly Ivins can move people to tears.
Richard Roeper wrote that it "rarely comes close to touching greatness, but it&aposs a solid, visually dazzling and warmhearted victory for the Force of quality filmmaking."
It's warmhearted TV with progressive bona fides — so right from the jump, its cancellation dealt a significant blow to the idea of representation and inclusion on television.
When Glover left 30 Rock after a couple of years to work on his standup, he stumbled upon the role of warmhearted jock Troy on NBC's Community.
Out today, the second single "Mirror Held to the Flower" is a slower, yet languorous, pop jam filled with luxurious synth layers, racy basslines and warmhearted vocal harmonies.
Unfolding with a sincerity that dares you to roll your eyes, this warmhearted documentary by Louise Osmond wallows in its working-class roots like a horse in clover.
One last question about "The Orville": why bother, when "Galaxy Quest" did such a wonderful, warmhearted job of sending up the "Star Trek" cosmos almost 20 years ago?
Evan's past — peopled by his vigilant mother (Andrea Jones-Sojola), worried father (David DeWitt) and loving, resentful brother, Michael (Trent Saunders) — overlaps with his present in this warmhearted show.
Governed by the Boy Scout oath, the West Point oath and the Golden Rule, it is populated by warmhearted TV Waltons, and protected from harm by honest Starskys and Hutches.
After years of therapy and trying without success to address his feelings with his biological family, Mr. Santana said he went from being "soft and warmhearted" to cold, angry and numb.
The brownstone, at 2311 Arlington Place, was the backdrop for Spike Lee's 219 film "Crooklyn," a warmhearted film that critics praised for its pleasant focus on a lost place and time.
This appealing little biography — which arrives just as a film version of its heroine's story, starring Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant, has been released in the United States — is warmhearted and delightful.
A gentle, warmhearted immigrant comedy that's rarely more than mildly amusing, "The Tiger Hunter" follows Sami (Danny Pudi), an aspiring engineer, from his rural Indian village to a job opportunity in Chicago.
That night, the moon beckons him to an abandoned lighthouse where the long-dead but warmhearted lighthouse keeper gives him a home in the best fishbowl ever: a huge, defunct Fresnel lens.
I can't imagine there is anyone who hasn't heard of him — not only as a fantastic baseball player but also as a warmhearted personality famous for brilliantly awkward sayings that will live forever.
It appears that even an image of Winnie-the-Pooh was censored, and some commenters found a reason: the warmhearted bear of A.A. Milne's children's books shows a resemblance to President Xi Jinping.
Romantic high jinks ensue as Mia sets out to secure a spouse with the help of her mouthy best friend (Heather Matarazzo), her elegant grandmother (Julie Andrews) and a cadre of warmhearted help.
Charlotte Rae, the quavery-voiced redhead who started out on Broadway but was best known as a warmhearted, wisecracking housemother in two hit 1980s sitcoms, died on Sunday at her home in Los Angeles.
In "Jerry Maguire," Dorothy follows up her admonition that Jerry not make a joke of his life with a warmhearted reminder of his core values and encouragement that he can live up to them.
Is he the warmhearted guy who, last summer, reeled off joyous games of table tennis with ball retrievers just minutes before defeating Daniil Medvedev in the final of an ATP Tour stop in Washington?
James Corden, the late-night talk-show host and car-pool karaoke impresario, will host the Grammys for the first time after a warmhearted debut as the host of the Tony Awards last June.
In poems that explore the thrills and anxieties of college friendships and graduation, internships and job interviews, first dates and first apartments, lies a warmhearted, powerful examination of what it means to grow up.
With help from several friends, Mr. Zviel and Ms. Raza renovated the space on a tiny budget and finally opened Mrs Robinson's (named after a "saucy and warmhearted" friend of Ms. Raza's) in late 2016.
The gray-bellied character may not mean much to Westerners, but for many in Central Europe and elsewhere, the animal is easily recognized as Krtek, a warmhearted cartoon mole whose adventures have dazzled children for 60 years.
Bill Daily, the television actor known for playing goofily affable and warmhearted pals on "I Dream of Jeannie" and "The Bob Newhart Show," died on Tuesday at his son's home in Santa Fe, N.M. He was 91.
It may be the one gesture that ties all of the world's multifarious sports together: an articulation of both joy and commiseration, a way to communicate sportsmanship, or an apology, or just to generally promote warmhearted feelings.
Youn is incredible as a zany, warmhearted, and rather untraditional grandmother ("You aren't a real Grandma," David constantly tells her soon after she moves in) and provides most of the film's laughs, as well as its tears.
In a post-"Louie" world, in which all the best sitcoms deal in melancholy and rage, "Broad City" offers something zany, warmhearted, and sweetly liberatory, like a piñata spilling out Red Hots, Plan B, and pot snickerdoodles.
In a scene that proves emblematic of Noga's prickly, contradictory but warmhearted character, one of the boys, a descendant of a revered religious leader, or tzaddik, clambers down a drainpipe hoping to sneak in through the bathroom window.
He presents a president who, for all his flaws, was usually gracious and warmhearted, who disdained the sort of divisive bashing that Mr. Trump favors and who went out of his way to make Barack Obama's transition successful.
Coben does his usual professional job on the central mystery, which involves the violent deaths of a detective's brother and the brother's girlfriend, but his greater talent lies in his warmhearted descriptions of life in places like Westbridge.
He tweeted warmhearted congratulations to his friend Tim Kaine when Hillary Clinton selected him as her running mate; he condemned the "lock her up" chants at Trump rallies; he worked on the bipartisan Senate immigration bill in 2013.
He regrets the chasm between finance and the rest of society, and he sets out to bridge it with a warmhearted and engaging set of stories in which he pairs fundamental principles of finance with parallel examples from the humanities.
The stories in his new story collection, "Good Trouble," revolve around various unreliable, slightly odious men, the sort of people unlikely to be on the receiving end of a warmhearted learning experience and, indeed, unlikely to learn anything at all.
At the movie and the restaurant's core is Regina Hall, who — in one of the year's defining performances — plays Lisa, the warmhearted manager juggling schedules, protecting employees from their own mistakes, dealing with the difficult owner, and basically destroying herself by caring too much.
Among the guests are the actresses Gillian Jacobs and Kate Micucci (of the musical duo Garfunkel and Oates), both from the new film "Don't Think Twice," a warmhearted comedy written and directed by Mike Birbiglia — and produced by the public-radio pop star Ira Glass.
It's also a surprising series to those who know Mr. Owens for his funny, warmhearted projects from the 1970s, and perhaps also to those who know him only as one of the founders of the craft beer brewing and craft distilling movements in the United States.
Nicholas W. AllardBrooklyn To the Editor: It is a sad commentary about the state of our national leadership when the director of the Vietnamese prison where John McCain was held captive has more warmhearted words to say about him than the president of the United States did.
The German indie studio had already put out DUX on the Dreamcast in 2009, a shooter that landed somewhere between those aforementioned titles and Sega's own retinas-scorching Fantasy Zone, and it received warmhearted praise for its tribute of sorts to CAVE- and Treasure-style bullet hell games past.
But Braithwaite's tale takes a darker turn when Ayoola tips her cap at the very man Korede herself is secretly in love with, the warmhearted Dr. Tade Otumu, who keeps a bowl of candy on his desk for his child patients and sings a lullaby to an inconsolable toddler recoiling from being given an injection.
Yet by many accounts, the conservative combatant of the Bill Clinton investigation and the 2000 Florida recount who has spent a dozen years as an appellate judge is also a generous friend, including to many Democrats; an authentic sports fanatic who keeps a beat-up basketball in his chambers; and a warmhearted family man.
Standout performers were many: Lester Lynch as Porgy, the sturdy cripple, and Alyson Cambridge as Bess, the warmhearted (and here, warm-voiced) prostitute he loves; Courtney Johnson as Clara (who sang an ethereal "Summertime"); Victor Ryan Robertson, as Sportin' Life, the "happy dust" dealer; and Eric Greene as Crown, Bess's current lover, in a menacing portrayal.
This warmhearted Indian movie, which was shown at the Sundance Film Festival this year, was directed by Qaushiq Mukherjee — the "Gandu" (20003) filmmaker better known simply as Q. Shashank Arora stars as the title character, a teenage quiz champion in 1980s Bangalore who leads two of his nerdy friends on a trip to Calcutta for a major college competition.
We discuss the forms of meditation Westerners rarely hear about, the differences between meditative and psychedelic states, the Dalai Lama's personality, why elite meditators end up warmhearted and joyous rather than cold and detached, whether there's more value to meditating daily or going on occasional retreats, what happens when you sever meditation from the ethical frameworks it evolved in, and much more.
A host of other great films played there, and then hit theaters later in the year — among them, the hysterical Jane Austen adaptation Love & Friendship, directed by Whit Stillman (Metropolitan, The Last Days of Disco); Ira Sachs's small but poignant drama Little Men, which gently explored both gentrification and teenage friendship; the warmhearted and funny Morris From America, which gave The Office's Craig Robinson the opportunity to showcase his leading-man talent; and The Fits, a startling, riveting debut film from Anna Rose Holmer.
In addition to the heaven-sent Ms. Simard, the musical, which has had two prior Off Broadway runs, features tasty turns from familiar names: Faith Prince, sending up the warmhearted Jewish matron memorably portrayed by Shelley Winters in "The Poseidon Adventure"; Roger Bart, playing the sleazy owner of the floating disco-cum-casino in which the musical takes place; Rachel York, spangled in faux Bob Mackie and flinging around a fabulous Farrah wig, as the club's headliner; and Kerry Butler as an intrepid reporter seeking to uncover the shoddy workmanship that causes havoc when an earthquake strikes the Hudson River, where the party boat floats.
The Commercial Appeal. 24 August 1990. Retrieved 25 March 2020. Karla Peterson from Copley News Service called it a "warmhearted" song.
Commander of the Imperial Guard Regiment. Nicknamed "Blade of Ice". True loyal subject of the Romanov. But he is also a warmhearted, sincere man.
In addition, Nelson sounded a warning bell against the privatization of public parklands. Her persistence led some to call her ruthless, but also warmhearted and feisty.
His tail wags like a helicopter when something fun is happening. He has friends named Queeny Lou, a beautiful swan, Skippy-Lou, a perky rabbit, Beary Lou, a warmhearted bruin, and The Little Red Mushroom; he is shy and always faces backward.
Though generally regarded as "generous and warmhearted" and "saintly" under the Marsha persona, Johnson's angry, violent side could sometimes emerge when Johnson was depressed or under severe stress. Some felt that it was more common for this to happen under Johnson's "male persona as Malcolm".
In late 1940s-1950s, Mafiosi were portrayed as a sort of an Italian version of the "noble savage" as tough, but fundamentally warmhearted men who owning to Sicily's isolation and predominately rural character had kept certain honorable and manly qualities that men in the rest of Italy had lost.
The film was based on a 1957 novel, Warm Bodies by Donald R. Morris, based on his experiences in the Navy. The New York Times described it as "a delightful book, fresh, warmhearted and full of fun." The Los Angeles Times called it "the best funny novel about the navy since... Mr Roberts".
John Masters: a regimented life by John Clay was published by Michael Joseph in 1992. Now out of print, it is a sympathetic but not uncritical biography. According to Clay, Masters possessed a strong and sometimes domineering personality, and could be impatient with weakness or incompetence. He could also be extremely warmhearted and generous.
Howard 1987, pp. 112, 124–6, 128–30 Hinsley, nearly blind and deaf, died from a heart attack at his country retreat of Hare Street House near Buntingford, at age 77. He was buried at Westminster Cathedral. Archbishop William Temple, of Canterbury, described him as "a most devoted citizen of his country...[and] a most kindly and warmhearted friend".
The character is billed as "a wolf in sheep's clothing, with far more to her than her warmhearted façade lets on". Paris called Ellie a "hardcore" and "formidable" villain who could rival other villainous characters. The role marks the first time Paris has portrayed a villain. Ellie will use "her prowess for playing roles in order to get what she wants".
Sebastian's deepest desires are to find his mother and to have a good friend. ; Belle : Belle ("Jolie" in the Japanese version) is a large white Great Pyrenee who escaped into the French countryside. She is gentle and warmhearted, but her attempts to help those in need are misunderstood. She is labeled "The White Monster" and the police are constantly on her tail.
Cultured and well off, he belongs to the city's bourgeois society. While walking around town, Dr Fadigati meets Nora, the only daughter of one of his friends. The warmhearted doctor purchases a painting and gives it to Nora as a gift for her ailing father. Nora is the last member of the Treves, a Jewish family whose fortune has fluctuated through the years.
After some time, Shankar backs and confronts his brother for his share. Thereupon, Shantamma strikes and necks out him when warmhearted Ramu forgives and lets him in. But deceitful Shankar heists Lakshmi's jewelry and Shanta becomes culpable, so, she is spurned from the house. Being cognizant of Shankar's behavior, Nagaiah calls off the match when blue Gowri attempts suicide and Shantamma rescues her.
It is time to recognize > woman as a distinct personality, different from man mainly in that she has a > special function in bearing, delivering, and nursing children, while he is > stronger muscularly.Levine, 1964, p. 13. While she wrote, "The emotional differences between men and women are largely created by society not anatomy.", she defended the more "emotional", "intuitive", "warmhearted"Levine, 1964, p. 12.
Seven Little Australians received generally positive reviews. Leonard Radic in The Age called it "a comfortable family-style show: warmhearted, sentimental and ever so wholesome", with the music "bright, conventional and homogenised" while "the book and lyrics follow a familiar pattern too". The cast recording was nominated for an ARIA Award for Best Original Soundtrack or Cast Recording in 1989.
Her cable informing him that she had been successful arrived just hours after he died.The Oakland Tribune May 24, 1908 p. 22 In his obituary, The Hartford Courant wrote: > Pete Daily was a genial warmhearted man who made friends where ever he went. > He was an actor of much originality and really made his own parts as he paid > little attention to the lines of the playwright.
" New York Starlee Kine asserted that it contained cinematic qualities, and felt that the scene was "satisfying, sad, and fun". She wrote: "It was everything you've ever wanted this show to be. Zombies plus no dialogue, such a winning combination! And how great was it that Sophia was dead instead of impossibly alive somewhere, holed up with Merle or Morgan or those warmhearted gang members in Atlanta.
She resembled him, not only in appearance but also in character: Elisabeth was just as intelligent and charming as her father. With her flawless white skin, long blond hair and perfect physique, she was considered one of the great beauties of the era. She was also regarded as demure, pious, and warmhearted but naive and intensely innocent because of her sheltered upbringing. Still, she was intellectually talented.
Allan Fromme (1916–2003) was an American psychologist, teacher, and writer. He became known for what has been characterized as a warmhearted, common-sense approach to life's day-to-day concerns. After graduating from Columbia University, Fromme spent 50 years as a therapist in New York City. Over this time, he made numerous television and radio appearances, authored multiple articles in popular magazines and wrote eight books.
Marianna entertained wives of foreign dignitaries at Mostorod Palace playing the piano. She also staged seances, which were however, stopped by Abbas. In an article published 3 March 1928 in the Nationalzeitung, Abbas Hilmi's former Hungarian Kelemen Árvay, describes Djavidan Hanem as: "a rare beauty and an intelligent warmhearted lady who had a soothing influence on the often petulant Khedive.", continuing: > She lived in splendor in Mostorod Palace near Matarieh.
Joo Hong-bin (Lee Dong-wook) is a wealthy man with a prickly demeanor who develops a supernatural ability - his anger and mental pain manifest as knives sprouting from his body. He meets Son Se-dong (Shin Se-kyung), a warmhearted girl who becomes entangled in his life. As they fall in love, she slowly heals his heart and he learns to deal with his inner pain and new found power.
He retired in 1982 to live at Warsash, near Southampton, where he wrote The Complete Crossword Companion, which remains in print and was his biggest earner. He died at Warsash on 8 September 1995. In his obituary he was described as > Warmhearted, energetic, and fiercely loyal to the causes in life that he > admired, punctiliously good-mannered . . . he will be remembered with > affection and respect in the many circles into which his life took him.
The Bad Seed was described by The New York Times as "kid-book humor at its best, both warmhearted and frisky — the kind that leaves adults, too, cracking up and grateful". He also paints with acrylics, in addition to his animation and illustration work, and debuted his painting series Pacific Abstract, inspired by the California coast, at a pop-up art gallery show at Bergamot Station in Santa Monica, California, in 2016.
Robert Emmett O'Connor (March 18, 1885 - September 4, 1962) was an American film actor. He appeared in 204 films between 1919 and 1950. He is probably best remembered as the warmhearted bootlegger Paddy Ryan in The Public Enemy (1931) and as Detective Sergeant Henderson pursuing the Marx Brothers in A Night at the Opera (1935). He also appeared as Jonesy, (the older Paramount gate guard) in Billy Wilder's 1950 film Sunset Boulevard.
Why pain is there the landlord, The greatest charity, The timeless wakefulness of God, The breathing space, respite. Like the pipes of an organ, roars The sculptured coral grove, The commotion of anthems tear down the azure vault. Smoke belligerent soars and spirals From pregnant, fertile soil, warmhearted angels whirl around like tempests transfigured. In fits of fury flashes write The eternal chronicle Of fateful tragedies that have No actors or observers.
Changing Times (Les temps qui changent) (2004) is a warmhearted exploration of cultural collision in contemporary Morocco, oscillating between two worlds and two ideas about the meaning of experience and the enduring power of love. A middle age construction supervisor comes to Tangier to search for the love of his youth, lost many years ago. She is now married and with a grown up son. They eventually cross paths in a supermarket.
He is very warmhearted towards Rose and designs an experiment to see how strong her abilities are. The conclusion of the experiment is that Rose is able to detect the emotion in the food she eats in those who cannot comprehend the emotions they are feeling themselves. One day Rose eats a pie that Lane baked and Rose collapses to the floor. Lane takes Rose to the hospital and Rose demands that they get rid of her mouth.
De Jonge was eleven when his father was appointed director of the Combined Javanese Timber Companies in Amsterdam in 1925 and the family returned to the Netherlands. He was sent to Baarnsch Lyceum in the Dutch city of Baarn for his schooling, where he was expelled three times for a lack of discipline. He was always allowed back in because he was warmhearted and charming. He passed his final exam and graduated just after his 18th birthday.
"Mordden, Ethan."Chapter One, 'Coming Up Roses:The Broadway Musical in the 1950s', excerpt" The New York Times on the Web, accessed August 25, 2009 In the role of Juno, eccentric dancer Charlotte Greenwood's hit comic numbers were "Nobody's Chasing Me", "Climb Up The Mountain", and "I Sleep Easier Now". Brooks Atkinson described Greenwood's performance as "warmhearted clowning"; she "throws her head back when she plunges into a song. She plays a few tricks with a collapsible camera tripod.
Their faith in Grogan's simple tale of loyalty among people and pets is unique, and it pays off . . . [It] isn't extraordinary cinema, but it relates to everyday people in the audience in a way that few movies do without being dull." Walter Addiego of the San Francisco Chronicle said, "this love letter to man's best friend will make dog fanciers roll over and do tricks. It's so warmhearted, you'll want to run out and hug the nearest big, sloppy mutt.
Bennett's career had three distinct phases: first as a winsome blonde ingenue, then as a sensuous brunette femme fatale (with looks that movie magazines often compared to those of Hedy Lamarr), and finally as a warmhearted wife- and-mother figure. In 1951, Bennett's screen career was marred by scandal after her third husband, film producer Walter Wanger, shot and injured her agent Jennings Lang. Wanger suspected that Lang and Bennett were having an affair,Erickson, Hal. Joan Bennett: Biography AllMovie.
The book is about a 12-year-old warmhearted schoolgirl named Mayzie who one day suddenly sprouts a bright white daisy from her head. It causes alarm in her classroom, family, and town, until an agent makes her a celebrity. The Cat in the Hat who serves as the narrator to this story helps Mayzie to understand her problem and persuade her to go back home. The book has a mini-song titled "Daisy-Head Mayzie" which her classmates chant.
Ursula Burton is an American actor, director and producer best known for her work on The Office. With her Five Sisters Productions company banner she has produced films including Just Friends (1997), Temps (1999), Manna From Heaven (2002), which the L.A. Times called a "warmhearted comedic fable" and in which she played the role of Theresa. Manna From Heaven was invited to screen for Congress at the MPAA by Senator Chuck Schumer and Representative Karen McCarthy, and hosted by Jack Valenti.
Marek, p. 7Watson, p. 6 Cosima's biographer George Marek describes Anna as "a simple, uneducated, unworldly but warmhearted woman ... for the first time [the girls] experienced what it was to be touched by love".Marek, p. 6 Of the sisters, Blandine was evidently the prettier; Cosima, with her long nose and wide mouth was described as an "ugly duckling".Carr, p. 28 Although Liszt's relations with his children were formal and distant, he provided for them liberally, and ensured that they were well educated.
On the first page, Forrest Gump tells readers "Don't never let nobody make a movie of your life's story," and "Whether they get it right or wrong, it don't matter." However, the character is not an idiot savant, as in the first book, but more similar to Tom Hanks' "warmhearted dope." The text purposely contains frequent grammar and spelling mistakes in order to indicate the character's deficient education and cognitive difficulties. The story suggests that the real-life events surrounding the film have affected Forrest's life.
Mr. Crudup's fine features, which flicker between masculine and feminine as the lighting changes and the mood shifts, are well suited for the role, though his sinewy, birdlike frame suggests Hollywood anorexia more than Restoration curviness . . . Stage Beauty is both timorous and ungainly, words that might also describe Ms. Danes's performance. Trapped in an English accent and in a character who must appear conniving and warmhearted in turn, she veers from teariness to brisk indignation like an Emma Thompson doll with a jammed switch. The British actors in smaller roles handle the material better . . .
The Evangelical movement takes form as the result of spiritual renewal efforts in the anglophone world in the 18th century. According to religion scholar, social activist, and politician Randall Balmer, Evangelicalism resulted "from the confluence of Pietism, Presbyterianism, and the vestiges of Puritanism. Evangelicalism picked up the peculiar characteristics from each strain – warmhearted spirituality from the Pietists (for instance), doctrinal precisionism from the Presbyterians, and individualistic introspection from the Puritans". Historian Mark Noll adds to this list High Church Anglicanism, which contributed to Evangelicalism a legacy of "rigorous spirituality and innovative organization".
Frangoulis had various appearances in great Athenian and other Greek venues in those two years. He was invited by the Special Olympics Committee to take a major part on the opening ceremony of the event in June 2011. Since he loves and adores children, Frangoulis gave a compassionate, loving and warmhearted performance, presenting a song from his new third international album Beautiful Things, which was first released in a place that occupies a very special spot in Frangoulis' heart: the country of Greece. The album was released in November 2011.
Batting at number eight or nine, he played some useful innings while leading Natal to victory in the Currie Cup in 1966–67, then retired from first-class cricket. An excellent tactical captain, he was warmhearted and devoted to the game. He wrote the books Cricket Crisis (about the 1964–65 series against England) and Six for Glory (about the 1966–67 series against Australia). In retirement, he briefly threw in his hat with pro-apartheid politicsat one point standing as a candidate for the ruling National Party, before moving into business.
The colour white, manifested through snow, chrysanthemums, and other objects, is prominent in the film; Okuyama suggests that this, together with the classical music and ritualized hand gestures, represents the sacredness and purity of the death ceremonies. Departures incorporates aspects of humour, an "unexpected" complement to the theme of death which Ebert suggested may be used to mask the audience's fears.; . Betsy Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times opines that, through this use of humour, the film avoids becoming too dark and instead acts as a "warmhearted blend" of whimsy and irony.
Variety critic David Rooney summarized Quinceañera as "a fresh, spirited drama, charming and unpretentious" as well as a "small gem of a movie with a stirring soul". He praised the "subdued, natural performances" of the inexperienced teenaged actors as well as Chalo González's portrayal of Tomas. Stephen Holden of The New York Times described the film as "smart and warmhearted" with "a wonderfully organic feel for the fluid interaction of cultures and generations" in Los Angeles. Slates Dana Stevens commended the film for avoiding clichés and for its "sharp-eyed analysis of class conflict".
Lurene Tuttle played Marjorie; Walter Tetley, a veteran of Fred Allen's Town Hall Tonight cast and other shows, played Leroy; and, Lillian Randolph played Gildersleeve's ego-puncturing maid and housekeeper, Birdie. The show's humor, like that of McGee, was drawn through clever word- play and phrasemaking as well as Gildersleeve's earnest stumbling and basically warmhearted nature. His new nemesis was Judge Horace Hooker (Earle Ross) ("That crook of a Hooker has hooked our cook!"), who oversaw his guardianship of Marjorie and Leroy and became a friend and periodic rival in various schemes.
The play's opening scene introduces Oldrents and Hearty, two rural gentlemen and landowners. Oldrents is a generous and warmhearted countryman, who represents the best of the traditional order of England; but he is depressed and pre- occupied with a fortune-teller's prediction, that his two daughters will become beggars. Hearty, a younger and temperamentally more phlegmatic man, works to cheer up his neighbour, and Oldrents tries to adopt a lighter demeanor. Oldrent's steward Springlove enters, to present the bookkeeping accounts and the keys of the estate, and to request leave to follow the beggars about the countryside for the spring and summer.
Robert Steven Singer is a fictional character in The CW Television Network's horror-drama television series Supernatural portrayed by Jim Beaver. Named after the show's executive producer, Bobby first appears in the first season finale "Devil's Trap." Although Beaver believed his role would merely be a "one-shot deal," Bobby has become a recurring character on the series, and is one of three characters who has appeared in every season of the show. The character, a "rough but warmhearted" working-class man who hunts supernatural creatures, has evolved over time into a father figure for series protagonists Sam and Dean Winchester.
Set in the American Midwest of the 1950s, Melinda (Jenifer Olivares), the eleven- year-old daughter of sour parents (Christina Raines and Thomas Michael Kappler), finds interest in small things: a spun silver spiderweb, her box of treasures, and an afternoon at Silver Lake on her "day of days". Melinda's often known as a "silly goose" by her best friend, Alice Wasser (Jennifer McClusky). As the movie progresses, Melinda experiences ageless comforts and pains. Eliot Bradley (Chad Stevens), a waylaid college professors enters her life along with a warmhearted waitress (Ruth de Sosa), who introduces Melinda to the blues and Coca-Cola.
Christina Nyman was the daughter of the wealthy brewer Lorenz Eriksson Westman (1690–1730) and Magdalena Lütkeschwager Lorentz, and married the wealthy brewer Nils Jonasson Nyman (d. 1762). She had only one child, her daughter Christina (1740–1791), whose sons were her heirs. After the death of her spouse in 1762, she managed his business, including both his brewery as well as real estate. She was described as a brusque and authoritarian, stout woman, but also as warmhearted, charitable and with sufficient moral courage to put any person in place, regardless of social class, when they were in the wrong.
While the presentations of his plays and musical comedies increased his wealth and international renown, Ade's legacy includes numerous newspaper columns, magazine articles, essays, and books that describe his perspective on American life in the late nineteenth and early decades of the twentieth century. Ade bequeathed his library, manuscripts, and papers, as well as most of his art objects to Purdue University.Kelly, George Ade, Warmhearted Satirist, p. 266. Following Ade's death, ownership of Hazelden, his former home in Newton County, Indiana, was transferred to Purdue University, who relinquished the property to the State of Indiana when it could no longer afford its upkeep.
Billy Graham In the U.S. and elsewhere in the world, there has been a marked rise in the evangelical movement. It began in the colonial era in the revivals of the First Great Awakening and the Second Great Awakening in 1830–50. Balmer explains that: > Evangelicalism itself, I believe, is quintessentially North American > phenomenon, deriving as it did from the confluence of Pietism, > Presbyterianism, and the vestiges of Puritanism. Evangelicalism picked up > the peculiar characteristics from each strain – warmhearted spirituality > from the Pietists (for instance), doctrinal precisionism from the > Presbyterians, and individualistic introspection from the Puritans – even as > the North American context itself has profoundly shaped the various > manifestations of evangelicalism.
In the eastern German province of Silesia, 1944, the war has barely hit the home front. Young Thomas, played by Tom Schilling, is a jovial teenage boy and aspiring painter who spends his days trying to romance Melanie (Bernadette Heerwagen), a warmhearted, beautiful teenage neighbour. The pair are both members of the Hitler Youth and see no wrong in their movement or in the movie theater shown documentary about the Kraft Durch Freude, aka Strength Through Joy organisation or in their nation at large. Melanie's mother (Suzanne von Borsody), a more worldly woman also inspires Thomas and Melanie with her avante garde notions of free-thinking.
The story is primarily set in the Salinas Valley, California, between the beginning of the twentieth century and the end of World War I, though some chapters are set in Connecticut and Massachusetts, and the story goes as far back as the American Civil War. In the beginning of East of Eden, before introducing his characters, Steinbeck carefully establishes the setting with a description of the Salinas Valley in Central California. Then he outlines the story of the warmhearted inventor and farmer Samuel Hamilton and his wife Liza, immigrants from Ireland. He describes how they raise their nine children on a rough, infertile piece of land.
Among her most notable roles in Swedish films were the shrewd celebrity reporter Vivi in Kärlek och störtlopp (1946), the working-class mother Rya-Rya in the drama Bara en mor (1949); Mrs. Larsson, the warmhearted mother of seven in the popular children's film Kastrullresan (1950), and the young primary school teacher in Gustaf Molander's Trots (1952) (screenplay by Vilgot Sjöman). In the mid-1950s Dahlbeck was one of Sweden's most popular and successful actresses. She became internationally known for her strong female leads in a number of Ingmar Bergman's films, in particular his comedies Secrets of Women (1952), A Lesson in Love (1954) and Smiles of a Summer Night (1955).
In 1790, the year after her divorce, she spent a fortune by having the summer villa Heleneberg built at Djurgården, where she engaged in gardening and entertained culture personalities such as Bellman during the summers for a decade. Helena Quding and her circle at Heleneberg was the object of many of the poems of Bellman, such as the Djurgårdspastoralerna (Djurgården pastorals). It is not known when she and Bellman became acquainted, but they were friends by the time of her divorce proceedings in 1788, and he often celebrated her with poems the following years, such as at the inauguration of Heleneberg. She is described as beautiful, warmhearted but serious, and her life at Heleneberg as idyllic.
Much of Larkin's writing was heavily influenced by his relationship with Brennan, including his collection The Whitsun Weddings, which he once described as Brennan's book. Brennan and Larkin's relationship is detailed extensively by Brennan herself in The Philip Larkin I Knew, which was published in 2002. Brennan's book speaks of both the friendship and romantic relationship that existed between her and Larkin, as well as recalling the poet's 30 year tenure of office as librarian of the University of Hull. Brennan aimed for the book to show Larkin in a new light: namely, that the poet was "considerably more compassionate, generous and warmhearted than autobiographical, biographical and critical works published since his death have revealed".
Having passed the British censors in September 1974,BBFC: Creatures Great and Small Linked 2014-01-03 the film wasn't released until 9 May 1975, when it opened in London at the small cinema Studio Two in Oxford Street.Cinema Treasures: Studio 1, 2, 3, 4 Linked 2014-01-03 The Times' film critic David Robinson didn't like it ("'All Creatures Great and Small' is so wholesome and warmhearted it makes you want to scream. Not on account of these qualities in themselves, but because of the director's (Claude Whatham) inability to give them any more depth or meaning than a television series"), but acknowledged that Anthony Hopkins' and Simon Ward's playing made their characters somewhat believable. "It works beautifully," said the New York Times.
Marshall cast Heather Matarazzo as Mia's best friend Lilly Moscovitz after casting director Marcia Ross introduced them to each other, insisting that Matarazzo is different from other actresses. Matarazzo attended a chemistry reading with Hathaway after auditioning for Marshall; Hathaway believes that the two actresses had met each other several times prior, none of which Matarazzo remembers, expounding, "I was such a sarcastic, little punk-ass kid that couldn't be bothered by cheerfulness" while "She's such a warmhearted, beautiful, sweet, soulful woman". Matarazzo insists that they got along well despite their differences, likening their on-screen chemistry to Richard Gere and Roberts' in Pretty Woman. Furthermore, the actress cites Marshall as her favourite director, whose positive energy she described as unrivaled by other directors.
Edu-Aid in Yongning (云南永宁山区爱心助学行动) is a nongovernmental and nonprofit organization which was founded in 2000 by some local teachers and people who eagerly cared about the underprivileged children in a mountainous area near Lugu Lake. The mission of Edu-Aid in Yongning Township, Ninglang County, Yunnan Province is helping poor children return to the school and improve the local condition of teaching. To ensure a long-term development, the Program has officially been authorized by Lijiang Charity in July, 2007. The mission is to collect and use the donations from all warmhearted circles to assist the needy children, improve local school conditions, and help the dropouts back to school.
Dialogue was "brisk" in the Alger novel and "when good disputed with evil, good always won." Generally, a "malicious young snob" and a "middle-aged rascal" schemed to hurt the hero's rise, and a "mysterious stranger" and a "worldly but warmhearted patron" were at hand to ensure his success. Violence was kept at arm's length in the Alger novel, the tone remained "optimistic and positive", suspense was never "of the nail- biting sort", and the Alger universe was "basically benign". Bode points out that the problems of upward mobility in the Alger novel were never "insoluble", and, although luck was a major element in the Alger plot, it was never luck alone that brought the hero success but luck combined with "pluck".
A single mother whose faith in love died with her former husband learns that Christmas miracles can still happen in director Harvey Frost's warmhearted tale of winter magic. Beth Sawtelle (Crystal Bernard) is a devoted single mother and advertising executive whose current campaign could put her on the fast track to the big time. The holiday season is here, and in order to sell the latest in video game technology, Beth's campaign needs the perfect Santa Claus. As Beth burns the midnight oil night after night and attempts to convince her young son Jake (Dominic Scott Kay) never to have faith in fantasies, the wistful young man pens a letter to Santa asking for a new dad for the holidays.
Although the joke may only be a small element of the entire speech, someone will recall it and share it with others and perhaps speak kindly of the speaker and wish to interact with that person again, or promise to purchase product or feel inclined to tell anyone who will listen about what they learned. This is when terminal credibility comes into play, but is dependent on how well the speaker presented the information to the audience. Speakers must also present themselves to be likable since people are more inclined to trust those they generally like or feel comfortable with in a room. Being friendly, easy going, warmhearted, nice and kind can carry the speaker into a very comfortable space with the audience.
In his early career he mostly played thugs or jailbirds, but in 1949 he starred in his most acclaimed role, as Lieutenant Monaghan in the drama play Detective Story and in 1951 he reprised his character in Paramount Pictures' film version Detective Story, alongside Kirk Douglas and Eleanor Parker. McMahon also starred on television, in the ABC police series Naked City as Lt. Mike Parker, a gruff, no-nonsense, but warmhearted cop's cop, interested only in justice and doing the job according to the proper rules of the game. He was nominated for an Emmy Award for this role. In 1964, McMahon played Hank McClure, a police contact in the 13-week CBS drama series, Mr. Broadway, with Craig Stevens.
Honey Santana becomes irritated by telemarketers and invites a particularly obnoxious one to a phony real estate promotion - which she describes as an eco-tour - in the Ten Thousand Islands in order to teach him a lesson. It is thus that telemarketers Boyd Shreave and his reluctant mistress Eugenie Fonda make their way from Texas to Everglades City, Florida, and eventually Dismal Key with Honey, unaware that she is being stalked by Louis Piejack, Honey's perverted and disfigured ex-employer, who is unaware that he is being followed by Fry, Honey's wise and protective twelve-year-old son, and his courageous ex-drug runner father. Also on the island are a young half-Seminole man named Sammy Tigertail and his very willing captive, Gillian, a sex-obsessed, warmhearted Florida State coed. Various odd events surface along the way.
In a contemporary review for Melody Maker, Paolo Hewitt compared listening to The River to "taking a trip through the rock 'n' roll heartland as you've never experienced it. It's a walk down all the streets, all the places, all the people and all the souls that rock has ever visited, excited, cried for and loved." Rolling Stone critic Paul Nelson deemed it "a rock & roll milestone" and said it possesses "weighty conclusions, words to live by" regarding "the second acts of American lives", conclusions "filled with an uncommon common sense and intelligence that could only have come from an exceptionally warmhearted but wary graduate of the street of hard knocks". The River was voted the second best album of 1980 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics nationwide, published by The Village Voice.
Borgnine and Betsy Blair in a trailer for Marty, 1955 An appearance as the villain on TV's Captain Video led to Borgnine's casting in the motion picture The Whistle at Eaton Falls (1951) for Columbia Pictures.Kisselhoff, Jeff; THE BOX: An Oral History of Television, 1929-1961; Viking Penguin, 1995 That year, Borgnine moved to Los Angeles, California, where he eventually received his big break in Columbia's From Here to Eternity (1953), playing the sadistic Sergeant "Fatso" Judson, who beats a stockade prisoner in his charge, Angelo Maggio (played by Frank Sinatra). Borgnine built a reputation as a dependable character actor and played villains in early films, including movies such as Johnny Guitar, Vera Cruz, and Bad Day at Black Rock. In 1955, the actor starred as a warmhearted butcher in Marty, the film version of the television play of the same name.
The broad humor that runs throughout this heavily illustrated story from Patterson and Grabenstein masks personal pain, demonstrating resiliency in the face of tragedy. Wheelchair-bound middle-schooler Jamie has recently moved in with his aunt’s cheerless family, including—a bit too conveniently—school bully Stevie, Jamie’s new “adoptive brother.” Despite Jamie’s desire to be treated like an ordinary kid (one of the more important themes the authors emphasize) and a dark, lingering unknown (only late in the novel does Jamie reveal the reason for his paralysis and his parents’ absence), humor abounds. Much of it derives from Jamie’s comedic aspirations (he calls himself a “sit-down comic”), which are fueled by his friends’ reactions to his one-liners and the encouragement of his warmhearted uncle. Park’s wisecracking cartoons (not all seen by PW) play an integral role in the storytelling, laying bare Jamie’s fears, triumphs, and sense of humor.
And retired legend Lt. > Joe Leaphorn, when Chee hikes out to Window Rock to consult him, does little > more than brandish a sheaf of maps showing the locations of gas pipelines > from Mexico. It's Chee's former officer and lost love Bernadette Manuelito, > fleeing the NTP for the Customs Patrol, who comes up with the crucial break > on the case quite by accident when she follows a truck into a ranch that's > raising oryxes for self-styled safari hunters and takes one photograph too > many. Hillerman Lite, with little mystery about who killed Carl Mankin, or, > unless you think Hillerman's gotten a lot less warmhearted, about what's > going to happen to imperiled Bernie Manuelito. Publishers Weekly calls this a masterful tale with deeper intrigue and a tighter plot than the prior novel in the series: > Bestseller Hillerman's 16th Chee/ Leaphorn adventure offers deeper intrigue > and a tighter plot than his previous entry, The Wailing Wind (2002), in this > enduring series.
" Richard Brody of The New Yorker touted Tanne's first film as "an opening act of superb audacity," and described it as "a fully realized, intricately imagined, warmhearted, sharp- witted, and perceptive drama, one that sticks close to its protagonists while resonating quietly but grandly with the sweep of a historical epic." Odie Henderson of RogerEbert.com gave the film four-out-of-four stars, stating that it is "at once a love song to the city of Chicago and its denizens, an unmistakably Black romance and a gentle, universal comedy," adding that "it is unapologetic about all three of these elements, and interweaves them in such a subtle fashion that they become more pronounced only upon later reflection." Stephanie Zacharek of Time described it as a "vivid and imaginative portrayal," and noted of the two lead performances that "Sawyers captures both the easy, loping rhythms of our future 44th President’s speech and the long- stride elegance of his carriage.
Around the table in the original 1933 Broadway production of Ah, Wilderness! are (from left) George M. Cohan (Nat Miller), Eda Heinemann (Lily), Elisha Cook, Jr. (Richard), Gene Lockhart (Sid), Marjorie Marquis (Mrs. Nat Miller), Walter Vonnegut, Jr. (Tommy) and Adelaide Bean (Mildred). Theatre Guild Producer Philip Moeller Director Robert Edmond Jones Scenic Designer CAST George M. Cohan as Nat Miller Adelaide Bean as Mildred Miller John Butler as Salesman Ruth Chorpenning as Norah Elisha Cook, Jr. as the son, Richard Miller Ruth Gilbert as Muriel McComber Eda Heinemann as Lily Miller Ruth Holden as Belle Gene Lockhart as Sid Davis Marjorie Marquis as David's mother, Essie Miller Donald McClelland as Bartender William Post, Jr. as Arthur Miller Richard Sterling as David McComber Walter Vonnegut, Jr. as Tommy Miller John Wynne as Wint Selby When the play first toured, Will Rogers took the role of the warmhearted Nat, perhaps contributing to the critical and audience success of the play, a staple of community repertory since the original production.

No results under this filter, show 156 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.