Electric Wizard

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    some characters like Dirk. Reconsider the ending with Nikoleen and if that’s the best twist. Trim narrative descriptions/dialogue. Consider if the factory/power plants scenes are needed (slows pace). Consider a structure similar to the film The Wizard of Oz. Make sure to highlight the message. The Library scene needs to be strong as this is the place she has been hoping to reach. Finding her mother should be more magical. MARKETING The plot is very engaging. The script feels creative, imaginative

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    The crowd gazed at the green-skinned woman in silent horror. She had already gone around terrorizing everyone in the square. Vella and Shay heard Oz whisper something to Glinda. The woman whipped around and looked at him. “Don’t you recognize me, Wizard?” the woman asked. “Have I changed so much?” “Theodora?” Oz almost whispered the name, not sure if he wanted to believe it. “Is that really Theodora?” Vella whispered, looking at Shay. A few facial similarities were there, but this woman before

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    Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass and The Wizard of Oz are fictional stories about the coming of age. Children relate to these stories and admire both Alice and Dorothy. In what can be assumed are Alice’s and Dorothy’s dreams, we see various anthropomorphic creatures and animals. There imaginary worlds lead both girls to face situations in which they must think maturely and at the same time lose a bit of their innocence, similar to when a young child takes their first step

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    The process to becoming a new character is one that many people do not get the chance to experience. It starts with the makeup, applied in a dimly-lit dressing room, surrounded by other actors in the same position. Foundation put on so heavily that the face resembles a just painted wall and lips stained for weeks after the final performance. Mascara applied thinly at first. Then, darker and darker so that the people in the back can tell that your eyelashes are there. And in one swift motion, much

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    Origins of the Shadow in A Wizard of Earthsea Ged, the main character in The Wizard of Earthsea, by Ursula K. LeGuin, through an act of pride and spite unwittingly unleashes a powerful shadow creature on the world, and the shadow hunts Ged wherever he goes. After failing to kill Ged the first time, he learns the only way to destroy the shadow is to find its name. What Ged must realize is the shadow was created by the evil in his own heart. Also, the shadow is not entirely evil, and Ged

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    In A Wizard of Earthsea, by Ursula K. Le Guin, the protagonist, Ged, lives in an archipelago called Earthsea and becomes a great wizard. Instead of avoiding his greatest fears, he chases them and challenges them in order to protect others. Throughout the novel, Ged displays courage, a trait that grows stronger in him as he matures. His bravery is first presented when he uses all of his power to protect his village from the Kargs, illustrating the start of his maturation. Later on, his courage is

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    Stacy Wolf’s main argument is that the Wicked was about queer romantic relationship of Elphaba and Glinda that why the young generation connected with it. Stacy compare Wicked to movies and TV shows that teens loves. She mention how Wicked went even farther that just portraying women as powerful and friendship by a queer romance between Elphaba and Glinda. One evidence is when she bring expert opinions of the Scholars of musical theatre and film and also gay/lesbian/queer studies to use their research

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    In The Wizard of Earthsea, by Ursula K. Le. Guin, the main character, Ged, is a young wizard who makes a pernicious mistake that takes a great deal of maturity to undo. To begin, Ogion, becomes Ged’s mentor and sends him to a meadow full of flowers to learn about the power that each name holds. Unfortunately, Ged is becoming impatient with Ogion, so he relocates to the school of Roke. Additionally, Ged learns magic vigorously, but overlooks their capabilities because he is overly-driven to defeat

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    Spell of the Magic Play by George Green Just like a vivid dream with the most energetic scenes, Spell of the Magic Play will take you on an adventure. This piece not only makes the viewer question what reality is, but it also pulls you into another dimension. It is booming with colorful energy at all angles, and will make any adult feel like a child again. Strategically placed acrylic paint is smoothly brushed on birch wood, creating multiple square and rectangular shapes. These shapes of colors

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    Partially due to the influence of her parents in history and anthropology, Le Guin mainly focuses on the science aspects of the world while incorporating elements of fantasy to entice readers in her novels such as The Left Hand of Darkness and A Wizard of Earthsea. As Ursula Le Guin was growing up, publishers often rejected her writings until finally she was told “write what you know”. She took this as her motto as a writer: “I know these things. I know them better than anybody else possibly could

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