How to meet the career spring

Effie 2021-12-09 08:01:25

Tradition and anti-tradition, and finally tradition is replaced by new fashion. The control of the dean and the rebellion of DeLauris, the ultimate victory is the rebellious spirit that the United States has always appreciated.

Deloris’s song, originally a praising of love, was transformed into a song praising God in the church. Perhaps the original song has no deep meaning as a love song, but after encountering the originally conservative church, the joyful second-rate song can also become a compelling innovation.

Sometimes destiny takes us to places we didn't want to reach, but unexpectedly makes us find our way in life.

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Extended Reading
  • Sharon 2022-03-26 09:01:06

    Four stars for the plot, plus points for the music. "I will follow him"

  • Amara 2022-03-26 09:01:06

    Omg, I watched it when I was much younger than I am now. It's really funny. Whoopi Goldberg is continuing this comedy with the climax of a hilarious supporting role in The Ghost Story. And then there's It seems that she also played the "Queen of Billiards" that I watched when I was a child?

Sister Act quotes

  • Delores: [after Vince has sent Delores a purple mink coat] Well obviously Mr. LaRocca feels he can win me back by sending me this absolutely *fabulous* coat.

    Michelle: Put it on, put it on!

    Tina: It's beautiful.

    Delores: You see, some girls would fall for this but not me. I think I'll make him wait a while before I let him know that I...

    Michelle: What?

    Delores: [Showing a monogram stitched into the inside of the coat] Connie LaRocca. It's his wife's coat. The man gave me his wife's coat.

    Michelle: I don't believe this.

    Tina: Put it back on! It's yours now, you deserve it.

    Delores: No, I don't *deserve* it, I haven't *earned* it. You don't *earn* other peoples wife's fur coats, okay? I think it's time to just go upstairs, give it back to him and get the hell out of this dump.

  • Delores: [at her first choir rehearsal, the choir sings a chord badly with Mary Patrick singing an octave above everyone else] Okay! Okay! Okay! Very nice!

    [to Mary Patrick]

    Delores: Um, Sister, can you just slide over here, please? That's a powerful instrument you have there!

    Sister Mary Patrick: Thank you.

    Delores: But I think it's probably a good idea if we bring you down out of the rafters, everybody wants to be close to God, I'm just not sure you can do it vocally, so I need you to sing an octave below where you've been singing.

    Sister Mary Patrick: Okey-dokey!

    Delores: And Sister Mary Robert, can you just come, yeah, come on over. I noticed that you're moving your mouth but nothing's coming out so I'd like to hear just you by yourself if you don't mind. Sister Alma, can you give me an A please?

    [pause]

    Delores: ALMA! Check your battery. Can you give me an A please.

    [Mary Robert sings in a whisper]

    Delores: Okay, try this. Close your eyes. Visualize yourself in room full of people, lots of silverware, people talking loud, dropping stuff, drunks, women with trays going 'whadda ya gonna have?'. Your voice has to carry across the din, you have to get up over all of that to be heard in the back of the room where I'm sitting, listening, straining to hear you. Okay? Keep that in your mind while we do this.