Cocktail waiter preferred
August 11, 2010 by admin
Filed under Entertainment
Cocktail waiter preferred.3 Passionate, blue-eyed nature lover seeks classy lady for outdoor fun Separated, one child. Midlands area.4 Elegant, well-travelled American 30-something. Oxbridge educated, independent means – loves parties, high-life, looking for grand passion to share Long Island mansion.5 Inexperienced, rangy (6′ 2 1/2″) newcomer to scene Loves: dancing, golf, New York Hates: Dickens, Hollywood movies WLTM sincere young woman No phoneys.6 35-year-old jet-setter in film business. Allergic to donkeys.9 Cultured, metropolitan man seeks gastronomically-minded partner for explosive trip across the Continent ALAWP. Immaculate dental hygiene essential.10 Adventurous self-sufficient woman seeks forgiving partner to share quiet years and wonderful anecdotes Chequered past, but financially secure No longer interested in marriage.
London or New York.7 Mature, single-minded, pipe smoking mariner and cetologist seeks companion for one last adventure. Interests: fast food, sex shows, space games, slot machines, video nasties, nude mags, pubs, fighting and handjobs Seeks sympathetic lady. Did they have different ways of working? “Oh, completely.” While Keitel is associated with the Method school, O’Toole dismisses even the idea of research “I never do that Don’t know what it means I read the script and it’s either there or it’s not. Simply identify the following fictional characters from their “lonely hearts” ads. 1 Girl-about-town seeks well-heeled gent of generous disposition Absolutely no strings attached Prison record not a disadvantage. And then he passes a coin through the flesh of my palm, rather impressively.. Here’s a Valentine’s weekend chance for four readers to win pounds 50 worth of books in the form of vouchers from Waterstone’s.
He’d rather practise the tricks he’s been learning from the magician on set Chortling, O’Toole tells me to hold out my hands. At the end of the day it’s just a couple of mummers, chuntering words.”Enough of the introspection. “It was fun,” he says, firmly.He and Harvey Keitel “spent most of the time talking about bars we knew”. I will stir the smooth sands of monotony.”Does the extraordinary, colourful world in which he grew up, thanks to his racing tipster father Spats O’Toole – “a contrary hoor” – explain how the son, later, could go off the rails in such grand style without ever really foundering? It’s notable that the sober O’Toole of today has never expressed regret for the hard living of the past. “A photographer friend and I went on the moor with some ordinary tea saucers and I frisbeed them into the sky. But on the whole, I’m fairly sceptical.”O’Toole is fond of quoting an early poem: “I will not be a common man because it is my right to be an uncommon man. We printed the photographs, made the saucer a bit blurry, and the art editor couldn’t tell the difference….”He obviously enjoys the whimsicality “I was a devout little boy A great believer Even now the myth, the idea of magic, appeals to me.
It’s the continued uncertainty about the fifth that lends the story the necessary mystery.In the late Forties, as a youthful hack on the Yorkshire Evening News, O’Toole set out to disprove the flying saucer story. It was only in 1982 that Frances coughed up.”Joe met Frances in a coffee shop in Canterbury. She left him for half an hour – I presume to pop into the cathedral – came back, and laid it on him that the photographs were fake.” Or four of them, anyway. A feeling with which he is familiar, even before the death last year of Jeffrey Bernard.