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#susan graham
lesbianishstuff · 4 months
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The smolder…. Holy shit
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aschenblumen · 6 months
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Richard Strauss, Der Rosenkavalier, op. 59 (acto II, «Mir ist die Ehre widerfahren»). Libreto de Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Christoph Eschenbach, director Barbara Bonney, soprano Susan Graham, mezzosoprano
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4operalove · 10 months
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Renee Fleming, Elina Garanca, Susan Graham im RICHARD STRAUSSS. *DER ROSENKAVALIER* 🌹🌹🌹🌸🌹🌹🌹
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monotonous-minutia · 2 years
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definitely part of my gay awakening
Spring is Iphigénie season
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mthguy · 4 months
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This absolutely gorgeous rendition of “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, Carousel, was performed by Tituss Burgess, Susan Graham, and Christine Baranski at the 2023 Kennedy Center Honors celebrating Renee’ Fleming.
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rocktheholygrail · 13 days
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Hannibal (2013-2015) Thelma & Louise (1991)
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mrbacf · 1 year
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Veja "Soave sia il vento - Cosi fan Tutte" no YouTube
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if there is one thing I really want to thank Chris Chibnall for it is the companion support group
seriously, if the BBC wants to film a series of short webisodes featuring whichever former companions that are willing to come back,I would happily watch all of them
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Hearing other women talk vaguely about how things “used to be bad for women” saddens me. Things were really bad for women in [INSERT TIME PERIOD HERE]. (Not now though.) There’s always a sense of distance and indifference. An impersonality, an underlying sigh of relief, “Not that bad, could be worse.” I think this is a result of disconnection from each other and our histories. And I don’t think it’s totally our faults.
In my experience going to school in the USAmerican Midwest, I was taught the barest bones of women’s history. It was totally impersonal, cold, not engaging for me at all. We pretty much solely focused on legislature, and that did not thrill me. (Did you know Jane Addams had intimate relationships with women?) But then I started doing “independent study” (reading lesbian feminist writing) once I graduated high school and it was like my brain was exploding. I’m reading The Dialectic of Sex and I still feel that way. I just can’t get enough.
As a result of reading what I’ve read, I feel a stronger connection with women who are different from me because it turns out we have a lot in common. I feel less inclined to say things like “Women had it bad back in the day, but things are better now,” because I know not that much has actually changed, and the concrete changes that have been made are new and fragile. (Women in America only had a constitutional right to abortion for fifty years.)
I think if more women read books like Backlash by Susan Faludi, Loving to Survive by Dee LR Graham, and A Passion for Friends by Janice Raymond, we will have a wider perspective and a better shared understanding of our situation and position in our societies. I also think a lot of women would feel less crazy and alone upon reading women’s accounts of our own lives, what we synthesize from our experiences and observations, and how we can do things differently. That’s the effect feminist work had (and continues to have) on me.
You likely won’t find these books at a bookstore—at least that’s the case where I live—but you can find them online. I use ThriftBooks and Better World Books, and I’ve never received a damaged or illegible copy of a single book I’ve ever ordered, even though they’re super cheap, usually under $10 for a book. (They sometimes have highlighter marks or notes written in the margins, but I like seeing what the previous owner had to say, and I like to write in them too.) Finding and reading these books is well worth the effort. Talking about them and sharing them with other women is well worth the effort, too. I’d like to encourage every woman to get in touch with her intellectual legacy.
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evviejo · 1 month
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thirteen's era appreciation: 378/?
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doctorkinktraveller · 6 months
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Doctor Who :-
Kerblam - 13th Doctor, Yasmin Khan, Graham and Ryan.
Christmas Carol - 11th Doctor, Amy & Rory. Special guests : Katherine Jenkins (Abigail) and Michael Gambon (r.i.p. 2023)
Waters of Mars - 10th Doctor. Special guest - Lindsay Duncan (Adelaide Brooke)
The Dalek Invasion of Earth - 1st Doctor, Ian & Barbara Wright. Final appearance of Susan Foreman
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aschenblumen · 2 years
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Ô bien aimée.
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ssaalexblake · 2 years
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Ian Chesterton in the companion support group could lead to some interesting revelations surrounding family matters. 
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doctorwhogirlie · 3 days
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Round One: Doctor Who Tournament -
Who is your favourite?
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Click here for Tournament Table
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Joe Manchin has a new rule when it comes to President Joe Biden’s judicial picks: If they don’t have Republican backing, he won’t vote for them.
The retiring West Virginia Democrat has quietly voted against several judicial picks this week, making for some close — though still ultimately successful — votes on the Senate floor. Manchin said there's a method to his opposition.
“Just one Republican. That’s all I’m asking for. Give me something bipartisan. This is my own little filibuster. If they can’t get one Republican, I vote for none. I’ve told [Democrats] that. I said, ‘I’m sick and tired of it, I can’t take it anymore,’” Manchin said in an interview Wednesday.
Manchin’s stance makes party-line nominees even trickier as the election nears, requiring total unanimity among the rest of the 51-member caucus unless a nominee has bipartisan support. At the moment, that might be enough to stop the nomination of Adeel Mangi to an appeals court; Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) came out in opposition to his nomination on Tuesday evening and he has no Republican support at the moment.
Bipartisan support for Biden's judicial picks can vary widely: Some get dozens of GOP votes, particularly if they are in red states where home-state senators approved the pick beforehand, while others get a total Republican blockade. And several GOP senators, like Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, are often inclined to cross party lines.
But Manchin said he needs to see more of an effort to get GOP votes.
“If they don’t have a Republican, I’m opposing. That’s my way of saying: 'I’m leaving this place, I’ve tried everything I can. Don’t tell me you can’t get one.' If you’ve got a decent person you can at least get one. Just go ask Lisa, go ask Susan, even Lindsey,” Manchin said. “Lisa and Susan both are not controlled by just voting party line, I know that. But you’ve got to ask them.”
Manchin also said he’s doing a little work on the side to preserve the legislative filibuster, even as its two strongest Democrat-aligned advocates — him and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) head for the exits. He said he’s telling donors to ask candidates “if they will commit to supporting and keeping the filibuster. If they don’t, you ought to think twice about it.”
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dorememefasol · 5 months
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*your interpretation of best: sweetest, funniest, most deranged, etc.
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