Tuesday, June 29, 2010

"Say Cheese — Smile!"

Today, I was approached spiritually, or, better yet, tete a tete, by some children and teenagers I know from "School Uniforms" magazine to write more about meaningful and significant concepts like "Say Cheese," a pilot for a major motion picture. As initially described in my long, detailed short story of mine, by two student analysts whom poked fun and reflected at the children today, "Ms. Yearly," "the portrait of an actress as a young girl" were caught up in a movie. What does all this mean — "Say Cheese"?

High fashion and haute couture's top models now glossing the Globe, from walks of life, across the Atlantic Ocean, traveling Europe, Milan, parts of Africa on the set, shooting catalogs, printing in more than 100 tabloids, on the covers of major fashion magazines, and in newspapers, the younger generation today wanted to know if "Say Cheese," would publish.

Today, the two analysts dug up a a short story of mine from about twenty years ago. When I resided for the summer in Newton, MA where I composed 12 times, 50 pages, a copyrighted short story of an actress on television and in movies, whom never really knew the truth as to whether she was seen successfully in the motion picture, or not. The dramas were a long detailed "epiphany," with the sudden revelation, manifestations, comprehensive of pastiches, special effects, tuning, sounds, of the drama of TV and motion picture which mysteriously basically overwhelmed "Ms. Yearly."

Today, the young actors and actresses question whether their careers should be guided further in show business and drama, and would it be worthwhile to produce such properties as "Say Cheese," or, other flicks like the "Orchid" series, the cliffhanger yarn "Locked Box," and a murder-mystery adapted from Anglo-Swiss artist Henry Fuseli's 1781 oil painting, "The Nightmare," ? Additionally, are they on television, or under surveillance in motion picture, in Reality, especially like being caught up in "Say Cheese"?

The "Say Cheese" motion picture stayed under wraps, with the folks still "Mumm," so as not to cause any further felony at the anchor desks.

Ellen J. Katzen
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