Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Lake is a British play written by Dorothy Massingham and Murray MacDonald. It was first produced in the West End of London on March 1, 1933; directed by Tyrone Guthrie, it starred Marie Ney and ran successfully through to September 16. [1] [2] The play's chief author, Dorothy Massingham, killed herself in the same month the play opened. [3]
The Lake (Kawabata novel), a 1954 novel by the Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata; The Lake (Yoshimoto novel), a 2015 novel by Japanese writer Banana Yoshimoto "The Lake" (short story), a short story by Ray Bradbury; The Lake, a radio play by Ned Chaillet; The Lake, a school production by The Lakes South Morang P-9 School in Victoria, Australia
The play is centered around four Iranian adults preparing for the Test of English as a Foreign Language, which is crucial for their ambitions to study or live abroad.The students include Elham, an aspiring medical student; Omid, who seeks a green card; Roya, who wants to communicate with her Canadian granddaughter; and Goli, who is earnest and determined to learn.
President of Romania Klaus Iohannis (pictured) resigns from office, and is succeeded by Ilie Bolojan.; The Baltic states complete synchronization of their power grids with continental Europe's, disconnecting from Russia's.
The House by the Lake is a 1956 British stage thriller in three acts, by Hugh Mills. [1] The main characters are Maurice and Stella, a brother and sister who plot to murder their unlikeable brother, Colin. [2] The other characters include Maurice's wife, Janet, Colin's long-suffering wife, Iris, and Colonel Forbes, a neighbour. [3]
"The Lake" was originally published in the May 1944 issue of Weird Tales. "The Lake" is a short story by American author Ray Bradbury.It was first published in the May 1944 edition of Weird Tales, and later collected in Bradbury's collections Dark Carnival, The October Country, and The Stories of Ray Bradbury.
The play opens in a fisherman's hut near a lake in the forest. Outside a storm rages. Here live the old fisherman Auguste and his wife Eugenie. And here lives Ondine whom the old couple found as a baby at the edge of the lake, and brought up in place of their own daughter who was mysteriously snatched away as an infant.
The Glass Lake is a 1994 novel by the Irish author Maeve Binchy. The action takes place in a rural Irish village as well as in London in the 1950s. It is notable as the last of Binchy's novels to be set in the 1950s. Binchy explores the roles of women in Irish society and inconstant lovers, and uses an operatic plot to hold the reader's attention.