I met an old lady on the bus from the Philippines, and she told me a story about what happened to her Mother at the hands of the Japanese. The Japanese were calling out the people of the Philippines one at a time and then they were shooting them execution style. The Japanese were very cruel. Just as her Mother was called out to be shot, the Americans showed up and saved the people of the Philippines. The people of the Philippines love the USA very much, and some of my best friends have been from the Philippines. And General MacArthur loved the people of the Philippines very much.
The French love the Americans too, the people were very nice to me in Cannes. And the Italians were very good to me in Rome.
The world knows what happens if we refuse to stand up against evil, the evil will not stop, the evil will just get worse. We must never tire in our fight against evil.
We must not turn Afghanistan over to the Taliban.
And now is the perfect time to post this video again...
Here is an acting scene on You Tube of me doing the Second Chorus from Anouilh's Antigone. My Uncle Dennis was my cameraman (He died in January of 2012, I miss him). I did a few takes that I liked better, but this was one of the few that I made it all of the way through without any mistakes, all in 1 shot with zero editing and without a teleprompter, my Uncle Dennis got tired of shooting it, and so we had to settle on this take. I hope that you enjoy it. I will make more You Tube videos eventually.
"Antigone, an adaptation of Sophocles's classic produced in the context of the anti-fascist French resistance, is Jean Anouilh's (1910–1987) most often-produced work today. Antigone premiered in Paris in 1944, but Anouilh had written his tale of lone rebellion against the state two years earlier, inspired by an act of resistance during Paris's occupation by the Nazis. In August 1942, a young man named Paul Collette fired at and wounded a group of directors during a meeting of the collaborationist Légion des volontaires français. Collette did not belong to a Resistance network or organized political group, but acted entirely alone and in full knowledge of his certain death. For Anouilh, Collette's solitary act—at once heroic, gratuitous, and futile—captured the essence of tragedy and demanded an immediate revival of Antigone. Aware of Anouilh's thinly veiled attack on the Vichy government, the Nazis censored Antigone immediately upon its release. It premiered two years later at the Théâtre de l'Atelier in Paris under the direction of André Barsacq, a few months before Paris' liberation. The play starred (his wife) Monelle Valentin as the doomed princess."
Here is a link for my video...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NnXQpikxyk&feature=youtu.beHopefully you enjoy it.
Tout les meilleur,
Tony V.