This is where I muse over a lot of things: Life, Website creation, Networking, Spirituality, Health, Current affairs and a lot more.
Many of these form the basis of my inspiration as an artist.
This was the most difficult episode to watch by far. As a woman there are things that are just too unbearable to sit and watch even if it is all acting.
With the series 'Lauren' a story is being told...the story of so many women in the army. A story that nobody ever feels comfortable telling. A story that is spoken of in innuendos and the women are always blamed. No woman deserves to be treated like a dog; like a being with no soul.
I cannot praise Troian Bellisario (Lauren) enough for the way she portrayed her character. You could feel her pain.
Troian is simply magnificent in this episode. She portrayed the strength that every woman has hidden inside. The source of which is often unrecognized. The strength to fight even when the physical abilities are lacking. The strength to persevere.
"Lauren" Season 2 premieres Friday, May 3rd with 12 new episodes! Catch four episodes every Friday through May 17th.
In this new season, Lauren attempts to get on with her life in the military, but is harassed and impeded. Stone tries to do the right thing, but is caught between military code and what she may believe is proper. As their conflict escalates, the question becomes: Will the ugly truth see the light of day?
Lauren, compellingly written by Jay Rodan, under the competent directorial vision of Lesli Linka Glatter (Gilmore Girls, The West Wing), features Pretty Little Liars' Troian Bellisario as Sgt. Lauren Weil who reports to her commanding officer, Maj. Jo Stone, played by Jennifer Beals (Flashdance, The L Word) about being raped by three fellow soldiers.
Stone's reaction is far from what the Sergeant expects. She warns Lauren
about the consequences she would have to bear if she pursued the
accusations regarding the "incident." The assailants' punishment would
be minimal compared to the repercussions this would have on Lauren's
career, a mother of a five-year old daughter and a five generations of
soldier. Stone deliberately avoids using the word "rape" as she
considers it "an emotive word."
According to Associated Press,
Beals, who'd been researching for more than a year what it's like to be a
woman in the military, said that even if her character's words "may at
first seem hurtful and harsh, (...) later viewers realize it's more
complex for the commanding officer, (...)."
In the second episode of the series, Lauren is approached by Maj.
Stone's legal counsel in a sarcastic way the Sergeant doesn't
appreciate. If she wants her superior to proceed with an investigation
though, she's told she'd better cooperate.
Maj. Stone learns meanwhile from her superior that the investigation is
not going to happen, because one of the suspects in the case happens to
be the grandson of a four star general. How she's going to handle
Lauren's report is revealed in the last episode.
Beals' character is strong yet human and sensitive. That shows not just
at the end of the first episode, but also when Stone tells Lauren with
tears welling up in her eyes: "What I feel doesn't matter, what I care
about doesn't matter." She had to fight her way up to be where she is
now.
Speaking of whether she has a preference for playing strong
characters with every new project, Beals answered in a Twitter Q & A chat after the series' finale: "I find
the roles interesting. I think it might be a combination of the
characters finding me and me wanting to delve into a more complex
realm."
Bellisario is by no means beneath the talent of her much more
experienced co-star. Only a brilliant actor has the ability to show
their range and grab the viewers' attention within such a short amount
of time the way she did, with the material she's been given.
Statistics show that in 2011, nearly 3,200 sexual assaults in the
military have been reported, with many more going unreported each year.
Beals is extremely invested in the military sexual trauma topic and hopes that Lauren
"implements some kind of change and does bring back some integrity to
the military and people's perception of the military, because there are
so many fine soldiers out there and not everybody has to be categorized
as a sexual predator," as she recently stated in a video interview on Huffington Post Live.
I have always loved this piece of music.................long before I heard Pavorotti's rendition.Nessun dorma (English: No one shall sleep)is an aria from the final act of Giacomo Puccini's operaTurandot, and is one of the best-known tenor arias in all opera.
History:
It is sung by Calaf, il principe ignoto (the unknown prince), who falls in love at first sight with the beautiful but cold Princess Turandot. However, any man who wishes to wed Turandot must first answer her three riddles. If he fails, he will be beheaded.
The Story:
In the act before this aria, Calaf has correctly answered the three riddles put to all of Princess Turandot's prospective suitors. Nevertheless, she recoils at the thought of marriage to him. Calaf offers her another chance by challenging her to guess his name by dawn. (As he kneels before her, the Nessun dorma theme makes a first appearance, to his words, "Il mio nome non sai!") If she does so, she can execute him; but if she does not, she must marry him. The cruel and emotionally cold princess then decrees that none of her subjects are to sleep that night until his name is discovered. If they fail, all will be killed.
As the final act opens, it is now night. Calaf is alone in the moonlit palace gardens. In the distance, he hears Turandot's heralds proclaiming her command. His aria begins with an echo of their cry and a reflection on Princess Turandot:
"Nessun dorma! Nessun dorma! Tu pure, o Principessa, nella tua fredda stanza, guardi le stelle che tremano d'amore, e di speranza!"
(English translation: "None shall sleep! None shall sleep! Even you, O Princess, in your cold bedroom, watch the stars that tremble with love and with hope!")
"Ma il mio mistero è chiuso in me; il nome mio nessun saprà! No, No! Sulla tua bocca lo dirò quando la luce splenderà!"
("But my secret is hidden within me; none will know my name! No, no! On your mouth I will say it when the light shines!")
"Ed il mio bacio scioglierà il silenzio che ti fa mia!"
("And my kiss will dissolve the silence that makes you mine!")
Just before the climactic end of the aria, a chorus of women is heard singing in the distance:
"Il nome suo nessun saprà... E noi dovrem, ahimè, morir, morir!"
("No one will know his name... and we will have to, alas, die, die!")
Calaf, now certain of victory, sings: "Dilegua, o notte! Tramontate, stelle! Tramontate, stelle! All'alba vincerò! Vincerò! Vincerò!"
("Vanish, o night! Set, stars! Set, stars! At daybreak I shall win! I shall win! I shall win!")
Paul Potts also shocked the world with his performance of this magical piece in the 2007 final of Britain's got talent.