Another great place to shop for Robert Goulet products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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Ultimate Broadway
List Price: $15.99
Sale Price: $13.11
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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Always You / In Person
List Price: $13.98
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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![Mr Wrong [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZWHEVC0VL._SL160_.jpg) |
Mr Wrong [VHS]
List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $3.49
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Of course, we all know now why Ellen DeGeneres can't find Mr. Right, though she was much less forthcoming when she made this limp comedy in 1996. At that point, while riding the middling success of her TV series, it probably seemed like a good career move to make this increasingly desperate film. She plays Martha, a TV producer in her 30s who is under pressure from both her parents and friends to find the right guy. Then, by accident, she stumbles across Whitman (Bill Pullman), who seems like the ultimate dreamboat: handsome, sensitive, and thoughtful. But his flaws become quickly apparent, and when she tries to break it off, he becomes a stalker. DeGeneres has some funny material early on, then must settle for reacting to Pullman's bizarre behavior. Pullman often is funnier than his costar but neither of them is particularly well served by the cobbled-together script and the generic direction of Nick Castle. --Marshall Fine
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![Gay Purr-ee [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51AQ2E2KPRL._SL160_.jpg) |
Gay Purr-ee [VHS]
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $5.99
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This little gem has the pedigree of a purebred Persian: it features voices of no less than Judy Garland and Robert Goulet, the original songs of Wizard of Oz composers Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg, and the writing talents of animation giant Chuck Jones. Garland gives life to our young heroine, Mewsette, a naive country kitty who runs off to seek the bright lights of Gay '90s Paris; Goulet is her devoted country bumpkin beau, Jaune-Tom, who sets off to find her (accompanied by the scrappy kitten Robespierre). While in Paris, Mewsette falls prey to the dastardly yellow-eyed Meowrice, and his compatriot, Madame Rubens-Chatte (played with hilarious swagger by Hermione Gingold), who runs a cathouse of ill repute off the Champs Élysées. The story is slim, itself a bit of an homage to Oz: country girl longs to spread her wings, leaves home, and has many adventures, only to discover that there's no place like home. But the stylized look of the film is breathtaking--the French countryside looks like miles and miles of Vincent Van Gogh's sensual Arles--and Garland and Goulet are in fine voice. If you love surreal animation, Judy Garland, cats, or Paris--or any combination thereof--this film will have you purring. --Anne Hurley
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![Recess - School's Out: Saving the World One Playground at a time. [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51YMNZVECAL._SL160_.jpg) |
Recess - School's Out: Saving the World One Playground at a time. [VHS]
List Price: $24.99
Sale Price: $3.02
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Disney's Recess: School's Out dipped in and out of theaters faster than fans of the cable TV show could snap their lunch boxes shut--kind of nice for parents whose idea of grown-up detention is sitting through such fly-by-night kiddie features. Now that home screenings are an option, though, plan for the ages 5-and-older set to settle in for reruns. Also plan to get sucked in yourself--if the screwball plot doesn't do it, the soundtrack will. While TJ and Principal Prickly (the latter the unfortunate bearer of the "saggy butt" that becomes this movie's clunkiest running gag) bust in on a crew of fiendish would-be teachers during summer break, slices of vintage grooviness--Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild," Strawberry Alarm Clock's "Incense and Peppermints," and Robert Goulet's "Green Tambourine" among them--get you cheering along, whether you're 3 or 43. The reason for all the retro funkiness revolves around the chief bad guy, Phil Benedict, a one-time educational visionary and former Prickly schoolmate. Back in the day, Benedict was a radical school revolutionary, but his manifesto for better test scores misfired when it called for a ban on recess, a concept so barbaric it got him canned from a cushy government job. Now, undeterred in his mission to make life miserable for kids, he's hatching a switcheroo scheme that will forever pull the shade on summer and thus summer vacation. Predictably, right at trigger time, TJ, Prickly, and the gang roar in to the rescue. It's an ending that's as pat as any on the TV show, but so what--this is a movie that aims for summer-linen lightness. Just as the Fifth Dimension promise on the soundtrack, it lets the sunshine, as well as a few well-timed chuckles, in. --Tammy La Gorce
The Third Street Elementary School kids are teaming up to save summer vacation for kids all over the world in Disney's Recess: School's Outthe hit theatrical movie that The Washington Post calls Great Fun! The school year is finally ending, and T.J. Detweiler is looking forward to summer. But boredom quickly sets in when his friends leave for campuntil T.J. uncovers an evil plot to do away with summer vacation! A crazy former principal, Dr. Benedict, is planning to use a laser beam to alter the weather and create permanent winter. Faced with the dire threat of year-round school, T.J. rounds up the Recess gang and bands together with some unexpected alliesMiss Finster and Principal Pricklyin a nonstop adventure to save everyone's summer break. As the kids discover the heroes inside themselves, a platoon of wacky characters, far-out music and sci-fi surprises turn this madcap mission into a major victory for fun!
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Home: A Memoir of My Early Years
List Price: $15.99
Sale Price: $2.30
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Syphilis, alcoholism, infidelity, and indeterminate parentage may seem improbable touchstones in the back story of one who didn't so much portray as embody the blithe Maria in The Sound of Music. But as this memoir of her formative years makes clear, there is more gravitas to Andrews than meets the eye. From her childhood in rural England and initial forays into British theater, to her first massive successes on Broadway and in the West End--notably as Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady--Home puts her celebrated career in context. While arguably offering more detail about the Andrews family than necessary, it nevertheless dishes wonderful anecdotes about legends and Andrews contemporaries like Noël Coward, Rex Harrison, Robert Goulet, Richard Burton, and Rodgers and Hammerstein, in prose as crisp and immaculate as the author herself. It also offers a revealing look into the intricate, exhaustive craft of performing--skills often taken for granted in tabloid times. Since the book ends just as Andrews is about to launch into the celluloid stratosphere, can Volume II be far behind? After Home, it would be most welcome. --Kim Hughes
"A frank, intriguing memoir." --People "Painfully shrewd, and written with real delicacy and pathos." --The New York Times Book Review "Home reflects the very qualities that first made the working-class English singer a star 45 years ago: intelligence, gentle humor, and a clear, sweet, surprisingly powerful voice . . . In warmly nostalgic later chapters, the book begins to glow." --Entertainment Weekly "A delightful remembrance of her own childhood, and an engrossing prelude to her cinematic career . . . Andrews is an accomplished writer who holds back nothing while adding a patina of poetry to the antics and anecdotes throughout this memoir of bittersweet backstage encounters and theatrical triumphs." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Frank and fascinating . . . Andrews comes across as plainspoken, guilelessly charming and resoundingly tough." --Time In Home: A Memoir of My Early Years, Julie Andrews takes her readers on a warm, moving, and often humorous journey from a difficult upbringing in war-torn Britain to the brink of international stardom in America.
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Quebec Boy
List Price: $19.95
Sale Price: $12.18
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A sensitive man grows up in an abusive atmosphere in the timberland of Quebec.
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Robert Goulet:

Who are some of the Hollywood celebrity cancer deaths? You already knew about John Wayne, and you probably have heard of Patrick Swayze and his continuing fight with pancreatic cancer. If you are curious about other celebrity cancer deaths you can read all about it here in this short article.
Paul Newman, a great actor and sometimes race car driver lost his life to cancer. Paul did live out a life to the ripe old age of eighty three, but in the end, lung cancer mastered him. He was a former chain smoker. Another beloved actor, Alan Hale of Gilligan's Island fame died of cancer at the age of seventy one. He had cancer of the thymus. A man from the early days of country music, Porter Wagoner, died of lung cancer at the age of eighty. He was known as the man who introduced singer Dolly Parton on his TV show that bore his name for twenty one years.
Robert Goulet was the man who became a well known celebrity in the play "Camelot". He had a great baritone voice and eventually won a Grammy, an Emmy, and a Tony. He was famous for his hit single; "What Kind Of Fool Am I ?". He died of lung cancer and was waiting for a lung transplant when he succumbed to the disease. This particular celebrity also had prostate cancer. He died at the age of seventy three.
Sydney Pollack was a Hollywood director and celebrity who directed films with such people as Tom Cruise also died of cancer. Mister Pollack was responsible for movies such as "Out of Africa" and "The Way We Were" with Barbara Streisand. He was also an actor and academy award winner who happened to develop stomach cancer. He was seventy three when he died.
Peter Jennings was an surprise to the world as a celebrity who died of cancer. He was an anchorman with the ABC news network and confessed to being a recovered smoker. He worked with ABC since 1964 and received numerous awards for his performance. He was diagnosed with lung cancer and died four months later. Mister Jennings was sixty seven years old at his death.
There are of course more celebrity cancer deaths, such as Walt Disney, Nat "King Cole, Gary Cooper, Yul Brenner of the movie; "The King and I". They are all testimonies to the fact that cancer can strike anyone who is not prepared for it. Be sure you are prepared and learn the primary cause of cancer for yourself. The good news is that you do not have to become a celebrity cancer statistic.
Lear more about causes of cancer types, prevention of cancer different cancer types and many more great cancer articles at cancer diagnosed.
Article written by Nilgesz Csaba owner of http://www.CancerDiagnosed.com
Donald Braswell II Songs through Silence
Donald Braswell II, San Antonio native, is appearing at a Pops Concert at the Symphony of the Hills in Hill Country in Kerrville, Texas on June 27, 2009 at 7:30pm. Tickets ($35) are on sale after May 3rd at the Cailloux Theater Box Office. Contact them at info@symphonyofthehills.org or call (830) 896-9393 or (830)792-2469 per the concert promo. The spectacular event is expected to sell out quickly. A 2:30pm show may be held if that is the case and tickets for that show may also go fast, so interested people should get their tickets as soon as possible. To learn more go to Symphony of the Hills
Donald Braswell Fan Club Newsletter Editor, Doreen Lee, in collaboration with member, Judy Docter, created a beautiful account of this amazing singers re-entry into the world of symphonic performance. It is NOT my work. Doreen's article is brilliantly written and I chose to publish it here untouched:
Songs through Silence: Donald Braswell’s Journey from Premier Tenor to Silence to Pops Tour
by Doreen Lee, in collaboration with Judy Docter
“Ed ho sentito nel silenzio una voce dentro me.” (And in the silence I heard a voice inside of me.) ~Paolo Limiti
When Donald Braswell takes the stage on June 27, 2009, to perform as a soloist in a concert with the Symphony of the Hills in Kerrville, Texas, he will have finally come full circle. The Juilliard graduate and protégé of Franco Corelli, the Prince of Tenors, was once known and praised for his leading tenor roles as Cavaradossi in Tosca, Rinuccio in Gianni Schicchi, and Pinkerton in Madame Butterfly; but in 1995 he saw his career shattered in the disastrous few seconds of the automobile accident that destroyed his voice. The journey back to his rightful place in the spotlight accompanied by a full orchestra almost took 14 years, but once again, Donald Braswell has arrived, this time exuding the depth and passion of an artist matured and tempered by the pain and suffering of his long passage.
* * * * *
As his bright vibrato trembled through the aria “Addìo, fiorito asil” (“Farewell, Flowery Refuge” from Puccini’s Madame Butterfly), Donald Braswell, though he did not know it at the time, was also bidding “addìo” to his career as a premier operatic tenor. It had been over five years since he had graduated from Juilliard, and he was quickly becoming an international star whose musical brilliance would soon equal that of Pavarotti, Carreras and Domingo.
But success, however promising, can be taken away in an instant.
That moment of adversity came for Braswell in late 1995. While cycling through Britain, he was hit by a car and as a result, suffered substantial damage to his throat. Because of the type of injury that he sustained, he was told by medical professionals that speaking would be a challenge for him and that singing was virtually out of the question. He would later recall going through a long period of depression after the fateful accident put a stop on his operatic career.
And understandably so. Braswell grew up surrounded by music, and had never imagined life in silence. His parents, Don Sr. and Jane, were Broadway performers who met on the set of L’il Abner. The music that could always be heard in the Braswell home complemented the tranquil South Texas hills in which he has spent most his life. During school, he would participate in community theater and perform at local events, all the while playing with his high school football team in order not to flaunt his aesthetic side. Shortly after college, his wife Julie persuaded him to apply to Juilliard, a school with a roughly 6% acceptance rate. He did it to humor her, thinking that he would never get accepted. But Julie and his family weren’t the only ones to recognize his talent; Juilliard not only accepted Braswell but offered him several scholarships.
Thus began the journey that would take the boy-next-door from Texas to international stardom. Braswell’s versatile lyric-dramatic tenor voice made him the perfect lead for many classic works from Puccini, Verdi and Donizetti. But the higher one climbs, the longer and harder becomes the fall.
In an interview with Trinity Broadcast Network’s Praise the Lord, Braswell stated that he had always believed that depression was something that could be overcome easily, and that it was only after his accident that he understood what it meant to go through depression. For two years, he could not speak at all. But despite this, he yearned for a way to express his pain in the most natural way he knew—through music. During this time, he composed “Look At Me”, a song which he has recently performed at several concerts. The song captivates the listener precisely because of its touching and powerful simplicity: “Look at me, ” the poetic voice begs of the audience, “I really am somebody.” He reminds us that underneath the sorrow of the silence that he was forced to bear, music was thriving and anxiously seeking a way to come out.
But at that time, the music within him had no means of finding a way out. It was then that Braswell began to realize that despite the pain he was going through, he had another source of happiness – his family. His first child was born during this time of silence, and he named her Aria. Braswell told Diane Bliss of Detroit PBS: “An aria is the love song, the place of expression and emotion in an opera. I named her that because when I didn’t have a voice, Aria was going to be the voice for me. She was my song when I didn’t have one.”
Eventually, Braswell learned to take the accident that stopped his career and turn it into something positive. He took on a new attitude towards life. “God was trying to show me something,” he would later recall. “When I was a professional opera singer, I was very successful at it…after this happened, and my child came along…I looked into the eyes of that child…I realized…it really wasn’t about me.” During the next few years, he and his wife had two more children, and because he was no longer touring the world, he was able to watch his three daughters grow.
When, against the odds, Braswell’s voice started to Come Back, he took on performance opportunities with local groups and his church in order to strengthen his singing. When the time was right, it was Julie who, like before, put him on a path that would take him back to the world of music – the world in which he rightfully belongs. In 2007, when the third season of NBC’s America’s Got Talent was searching for new talent, Julie sent in an audition video on her husband’s behalf. In September of that year, he was called to Dallas for a preliminary audition. In a 90-second performance, his life would be changed – again.
When he announced that he would be singing Josh Groban’s “You Raise Me Up”, laughter could be heard from the audience and booing ensued. By the end of the song, the audience was unanimously chanting their approval for him to advance to the next round. And he did, but not for long. The judges did not let him move on to Top 40, and Braswell, thrown off his musical career for the second time in his life, went back to his normal job and thought that singing was simply not his destiny.
But fate would have it otherwise. When a wild card spot opened up in the Top 40, Braswell was one of the eight contestants selected for a chance to return. The American public, perhaps impressed by his ability to turn the audience around during his first audition, perhaps awed by his powerful voice and the grace with which he handled himself on stage, voted Braswell back into the Top 40. From there, he went on to become a finalist, where, 13 years after being told that he might never speak again, he sang to a standing ovation and later won fourth place.
His experience on America’s Got Talent gave Braswell the opportunity to explore other genres of music. When the show’s producer, Simon Cowell, encouraged him to sing “Unchained Melody” at the finalists’ concert in Las Vegas, Braswell, still holding on to his classical roots, was at first skeptical. However, he trusted Cowell’s judgment and today “Unchained Melody” is one of his signature pieces as well as a fan favorite. He has since then performed even more soulful pieces like Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” and done Elvis impressions, while still remaining loyal to the people who followed him through and before America’s Got Talent with covers from classical crossover artists such as Mario Frangoulis and Andrea Bocelli.
Now imagine a classically trained singer performing pop, rock or soul with a full orchestra. This is what Braswell will achieve in his participation with the Symphony of the Hills. When he launches the Symphony’s 2009-2010 season, he hopes to launch a Pops tour that will eventually give him the opportunity to perform with symphony orchestras around the nation. Through all that he has experienced, Donald Braswell is back home, both to the Hill Country that he has known since childhood and also back to his rightful place in music with a full orchestra.
About the Author
Cherie is the President of the Donald Braswell Fan Club. Contact her at Cherie@donaldbraswellfanclub.org. Donald was a finalist on America's Got Talent, and is a fast-rising music entertainer and inspirational speaker. Cherie follows his progress in this column and gives people a close view of his activities. To learn more about Donald go to the Donald Braswell Fan Club or the Donald Braswell II website or listen to him on www.myspace.com/donaldbraswellmusic. Close knit fan club members, who call themselves “Braswellians”, can be spotted in audiences of all performances with their yellow roses.
Have you ever caught Robert Goulet messing with you stuff at work?
around 3 p.m.
Ya know, now that you mention it, I did hear the faint sound of 'Camelot' and then poof, all of my paperwork was messed up.
He's fast
Basketball Playoff Wrapup
NASHUA PARK-REC. BOYS JR. BIDDY Lakers squeak out championship It wasn’t easy, but the Lakers successfully defended their Boys Junior Biddy title. Rallying from six points down with just two minutes left in regulation, the Lakers forced overtime and then held off a pesky Patriots squad for a 37-35 victory to finish undefeated on the season.
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