Christopher Reeve was born on September 25th 1952 in New York City. As a child he had many medical problems such as asthma, allergies, Alopecia, oz good schlatters disease; causes swelling of the knees. Christopher studied acting at Cornell University and then was accepted into Julliard; a school of performing arts. He got roles in plays and movies such as “Grey Lady Down”. Later on, after he received a role as Superman.
He grew up in California as the son of farm workers. His interest in drama began early when he was six years old. He watched a teacher used part of a paper bag to make paper-mâché masks for a theater production. This experience led him to the theater. He received his Bachelor Arts in English from the San Jose State University, where he produced his first play.
He attended San Diego State University as well as Oregon College of Commercial Art. Later on in 1983, Carson was teaching high school Sociology in del mar California when he went to Switzerland, where he attended a three-week workshop in graphic design as part of his degree. This is where he met his first great influence, who also happened to be the teacher of this course, Hans-Rudolf Lutz. Carson has a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology. He became renowned for his inventive graphics in the 1990s.
You could say that was the start of his career as a composer. Menken attended Rochelle High School in his home town and after graduation went to Pre-med school to become a dentist. Lucky for us he later changed his major to music. After college Alen attended the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theater Workshop in New York where he worked at local clubs writing jingles and songs as an accompanist. Alen Menken got his first big break in January of 1979 with Howard Ashman in the Off-Broadway production “God Bless you, Mr. Rosewater.” Three years later he received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Music in his Off-Broadway Production “Little Shop of Horrors” and from that in January of 1987 Menken was given his first Oscar nomination for a song with in it called “Mean Green Mother from Outer Space.” In 1990 Menken was nominated for three Oscar nominations and three Golden Globe Nominations and went on to win two of each for his work in the Walt Disney production “The Little Mermaid”.
Bandura learned a lot about value and importance of self-direction from this time in his life (Aboud, 2005). After graduating high school, Bandura started working in Alaska during the summer (Aboud, 2005). Then he decided to go to the University of British Columbia (Aboud, 2005). He took an introductory psychology course because it fit into an early timeslot thus allowing him to work in the afternoon and became hooked (Aboud, 2005). He graduated three years later in 1949 with the Bolocan Award in psychology (Aboud, 2005).
Several of Augustine’s Manichee friends were of influence in Rome, and arr.for him an audition to be a professor of rhetoric for the imperial court of Milan. At age 30, Augustine had successfully gained the most visible position in academia in the Latin world. After two years at his imperial position, Augustine took a leave of absence to retreat to Cassiciacum with friends - a stay which would change the remainder of his life. Augustine recalled philosophical conversations at the retreat in some of his later works, and he was baptized into the Christian faith upon his return (O’Donnell 1-3). Augustine returned to his hometown, Thagaste, and set up a small community of disciples and wrote several works.
Darren Everett Criss (born February 5, 1987) is an American actor, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and composer. One of the founding members and co-owners of StarKid Productions, a musical theater company based in Chicago, Illinois, Criss first garnered attention playing the lead role of Harry Potter in StarKid's musical production of A Very Potter Musical. The theater troupe made Billboard history when Me and My Dick became the first charting student-produced musical recording, debuting at number eleven on the Top Cast Albums chart in 2010. Criss is best known for his portrayal of Blaine Anderson (2010–present), an openly gay high school student, on the Fox musical comedy-drama series Glee. As the lead vocalist of Glee's Dalton
Moscovitch's father is Jewish, of Romanian and Ukrainian background,[3] while her mother is from a Christian background (of English and Irish ancestry). [4][5][6] Moscovitch was "raised as an atheist", and has said that there is "implicitly Jewish sensibility" to her plays. [7][8] At age eighteen, Moscovitch travelled to the Golan Heights and spent four months living in a Kibbutz. She enrolled in the National Theatre School in the acting stream. One of her student works, Cigarettes and Tricia Truman, won enough notice to be workshopped at Ottawa's Great Canadian Theatre Company.
When he was 20 he was selected to go to China for 6 months for an international Christian conference and he says that his new experiences so broadened his thinking that he began to doubt some of his basic religious views. He graduated and got married to his childhood sweetheart against his parents’ wishes. He decided not to follow a career in religious work and switched to a clinical psychology programme and received his Ph.D in 1931. While completing his doctoral work, he engaged in child study and he first started working as a psychologist in New York with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. At this clinic he learned about Otto Rank’s theory and therapy techniques which started him on the road to developing his client centred approach.
Barthelme was drafted into the Korean War in 1953, arriving in Korea on July 27, the very day the cease-fire ending the war was signed. He served briefly as the editor of an Army newspaper before returning to the U.S. and his job at the Houston Post. Once back, he continued his studies at the University of Houston, studying philosophy. Although he continued to take classes until 1957, he never received a d...moreDonald Barthelme was a short story writer and novelist whose minimalist style placed him among the leading innovative writers of modern fiction who was born in Philadelphia on April 7, 1931. His father was a professor of architectural design at the University of Houston, where Barthelme would later major in journalism.