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Lloyd Rose. "Lynn Redgrave, Taking Shakespeare to Heart." The Washington Post. Washingtonpost Newsweek Interactive. 1994. HighBeam Research. 25 Mar. 2016 <https://www.highbeam.com>.
Lloyd Rose. "Lynn Redgrave, Taking Shakespeare to Heart." The Washington Post. 1994. HighBeam Research. (March 25, 2016). https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-874338.html
Lloyd Rose. "Lynn Redgrave, Taking Shakespeare to Heart." The Washington Post. Washingtonpost Newsweek Interactive. 1994. Retrieved March 25, 2016 from HighBeam Research: https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-874338.html
In the movies or on television, Lynn Redgrave looks robust and hearty, but onstage she has the delicate Redgrave radiance - that unsettling, luminous sensitivity, as if the nerve endings were glowing close to the skin's surface. She shares it with her sister Vanessa, her niece Natasha Richardson and her father, Sir Michael, to whom her "Shakespeare for My Father," which opened last night at Ford's Theatre, is dedicated. Particularly when she is not speaking, her face can seem to hold an impossible number of emotions simultaneously, yet such fullness of feeling is mysteriously unreadable. At such moments you glance up to Sir Michael's picture, which dominates the stage, and find the same paradox of expressiveness and ambiguity - he looks sorrowful, thoughtful, yet resolute, yet lost, even a little menacing. …
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