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Get your students to be gansters in this great play which has been
specially adapted for schools from the popular film and it even
includes still photographs. So join all the characters: Bugsy, Fat
Sam, Tallulah and Dandy Dan for great fun with the whole class.
Students will relish this opportunity to play a cast of
Prohibition-era mobsters. Fat Sam, who runs one of the most popular
speakeasies in town, is in danger of being closed down by his
'business rival' Dandy Dan. Enter baby-faced Bugsy Malone, a killer
with the ladies and a definite asset to Fat Sam. Unfortunately,
Bugsy has also caught the eye of Sam's girlfriend Tallulah - though
he's set his designs on the showgirl Blousey Brown. This play lends
itself perfectly to school performance with its large mixed cast
and consistent humour. The book contains a stimulating playscript
suitable for classwork and school production, accompanied by
resources including background material and lively activities.
This single-volume book contends that reshaping the paradigm of
American Indian identity, blood quantum, and racial distinctions
can positively impact the future of the Indian community within
America and America itself. This academic compendium examines the
complexities associated with Indian identity in North America,
including the various social, political, and legal issues impacting
Indian expression in different periods; the European influence on
how self-governing tribal communities define the rights of
citizenship within their own communities; and the effect of Indian
mascots, Thanksgiving, and other cultural appropriations taking
place within American society on the Indian community. The book
looks at and proposes solutions to the controversies surrounding
the Indian tribal nations and their people. The authorsâall
leading advocates of Indian progressâargue that tribal
governments and communities should reconsider the notion of what
comprises Indian identity, and in doing so, they compare and
contrast how indigenous people around the world define themselves
and their communities. Chapters address complex questions under the
discourse of Indian law, history, philosophy, education, political
science, anthropology, art, psychology, and civil rights. Topics
covered in depth include blood quantum, racial distinctions, First
Nations, and tribal citizenship.
'Who's Who in Twentieth-Century Poetry is excellent value.' - Bob Duckett, Bradford Libraries
Algorithms and Data Structures in C++ introduces modern issues in
the theory of algorithms, emphasizing complexity, graphs, parallel
processing, and visualization. To accomplish this, the book uses an
appropriate subset of frequently utilized and representative
algorithms and applications in order to demonstrate the unique and
modern aspects of the C++ programming language.
What makes this book so valuable is that many complete C++ programs
have been compiled and executed on multiple platforms. Each program
presented is a stand-alone functional program. A number of
applications that exercise significant features of C++, including
templates and polymorphisms, is included. The book is a perfect
text for computer science and engineering students in traditional
algorithms or data structures courses. It will also benefit
professionals in all fields of computer science and engineering.
Praise for "The Sucker's Kiss"
"Alan Parker is a master of historical perspective. In" The
Sucker's Kiss," he evokes early twentieth-century San Francisco
with all the grit and ferment of a West Coast William
Kennedy."
- T. C. Boyle
"Alan Parker has written an engaging, entertaining romp. . . . His
rogue's story is funny, ebullient, and ultimately poignant."
- Kevin Baker, author of "Paradise Alley"
"Memo to Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild:
Please go on strike more often. Why? Well, while you were picketing
and protesting, a director and writer, Alan Parker, decided to
write a hell of a novel, "The Sucker's Kiss," You might expect Sir
Alan to take as his territory England, particularly North London.
He might have written of highwaymen and he chose instead the
forty-eight states. There goes his picaresque hero, Thomas Moran,
goaded into pickpocketing by the San Francisco earthquake of 1906.
After that the sky is the limit and two oceans his borders."
- Frank McCourt, author of "Angela's Ashes"
"Triumphant . . . Parker has created a splendid character, an
amiable, amoral rogue whom the reader cannot help rooting
for."
- "Daily Mail "(U.K.)
"A gripping, entertaining, and finely wrought story to match the
best of his films."
- "The Independent on Sunday" (U.K.)
"A thrilling and enjoyable read, filmic and brilliantly paced. As
you might expect, Parker is a gifted storyteller."
- "Scotland"" on Sunday" (U.K.)
"A vivid, colorful, fast-paced, literary, and cinematic work, full
of strong characterizations and wonderfully textured prose."
- "Nottingham"" Evening Post" (U.K.)
The last word on Sid Vicious - the world's most iconic punk figure.
The old school register for Soho Parish Primary school has a note
in the margin recording that five-year-old John Simon Ritchie
turned up for his first day at school unaccompanied in September
1962. He'd walked from his mum's council flat near Drury Lane,
across Covent Garden and several major road junctions to Gt
Windmill Street alone. Somehow it's a fitting start to the wild and
troubled life that would be Sid Vicious's. It's also a story that's
indicative of the detailed research Alan Parker has put into this
biography of Sid Vicious. He spent an evening discussing young
Simon Ritchie's schooldays with the headmistress of Soho Parish,
has interviewed the likes of fellow Sex Pistols Paul Cook and Glen
Matlock at length, as well as numerous other punk luminaries. The
basics of Sid Vicious's brief 21 years are well known: art school,
junkie mother, life in a squat, a year in the Sex Pistols until
their demise in 1978, Nancy Spungeon's death, Sid's arrest,
followed by Sid's own fatal overdose on 2 February 1979. Parker
brings a wealth of new detail to the story, much gained from the
New York Police Department and extensive interviews with Anne
Beverley (Sid's mother), prior to her own suicide in 1996. This
enables him to come to dramatic conclusions about who killed Nancy
Spungeon and how Sid himself died. This will be the definitive and
final word on Sid Vicious, and the perfect tribute to a man who has
become a true icon of the 21st century.
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