s include generations of White House dwellers.Carl starts to   say 
 wedding   dresses cheap , but Iris shushes him.She's happy to talk about her storied   life, but it's clear there are some secrets she'll take with her.Maysles doesn't   press the point; even the greatest documentarians know there are places you   don't go.Iris opens May 15 at the Bloor cinema in Toronto; May 28 in Ottawa;k)   and Erwartung (Schoenberg) in a staging by an up-and-comer from Quebec City   named Robert Lepage.Acclaimed for its bold strokes back then, the double bill   seemed even more remarkable for its coherence Wednesday night in the Four   Seasons Centre.Newcomers and return customers alike will not regret their   investment.Bluebeard comes first.The self-made widower is in Austro-Hungarian   uniform, his latest bride in a wedding dress.After viewing the castle as a   golden dollhouse from afar, the not-so-happy couple enter a dank and oppressive   vestibule made doubly claustrophobic by the forced perspective of Michael   Levine's set.Bass John Relyea, a tall man to begin with, seems a giant at the   far end of this funnel.As the pair proceed downstage, opening those famous   doors, Bluebeard becomes more human in scale.Did we really need him begging on   all fours?The duke's desire to kiss his newlywed and pleas to go no further   sufficiently establish his sensitive side.Another questionable decision was to   close the doors, leaving the castle dark despite Bluebeard's observation (no   secrets in the age of surtitles) that his man cave is getting brighter.ois   Racine, clarifies the essence of this timeless if stereotypical story about the   female urge to understand and male reluctance to be understood.Relyea applied a   dark-chocolate tone to the title role.If the Russian mezzo-soprano Ekaterina   Gubanova was sometimes covered by the orchestra in the early going, she seemed   genuinely tragic at the end.Erwartung, another expressionist outpouring from   about a decade into the 20th century, is more radical in musical dialect and   less linear in dramatic trajectory.It also seems, as a production, more   characteristically Lepage-esque.Arms, trees and torsos emerge surrealistically   from a long wall and slow-motion ballets illuminate the hallucinations that   bedevil the only singing character.The moon rises, sets and changes colour while   a seated psychiatrist with pad and pencil oversees the extended nightmare.is   understood from the outset to be clinically insane.Would it not be easier to   sympathize with someone lost in a moonlit forest?not make a stronger impression   with fewer special effects to compete with?All the   same 
 romantic   wedding dresses , a Freudian treatment is not at odds with the   stream-of-consciousness text (written by Marie Pappenheim, a relation of the   Anna O.of psychoanalytic fame).The work of Robert Thomson (lighting)   Laurie-Shawn Borzovoy (media) engaged our interest as well as our attention, as   did three nonspeaking actors (who had played the murdered wives in   Bluebeard).Not a moment of this half-hour atonal masterpiece sagged.For this we   could credit in large part the lucid work of the COC Orchestra under Johannes   Debus, who showed an intuitive sense of Schoenberg's stop-and-go idiom.k seemed   less clearly a genius on this hearing, although the brass played grandly at the   opening of the fifth door, when Bluebeard's lands are revealed in all their   C-major splendour.Perhaps the score will gain something in expressive   respiration as the run progresses.The Wednesday performance was dedicated to the   memory of Joan Watson, whose leadership of the COC Orchestra horn section had   much to do with the renown of the ensemble built by Richard Bradshaw.The   production continues through May 23.but British bookies are betting on a girl.If   they're right, the British monarchy will welcome a princess into the immediate   line to the throne for the first time since 1950.But the world has changed   enormously since Princess Anne was born to the current Monarch, Elizabeth II.The   relentless culture of celebrity that has engulfed the Royal Family has only been   compounded by social media and gossip websites.Even Catherine, Duchess of   Cambridge, who remains a beloved figure and fashion icon, has seen her role   profoundly circumscribed by the scandal-wary royals.The pressures on a little   princess would be enormous, perhaps even unprecedented.When Anne was born, most   homes didn t even have television, notes Robert Finch, the chairman of the   Monarchist League of Canada.This was before this period of bringing down the   barrier between private and public life.The level of scrutiny and interest this   time around would be much more intense, I would think.million in sales of   memorabilia and celebratory food alone in the days after her birth.However,   Joshua   Bamfield 
 designer   wedding dress , director of the Centre for Retail Research, said the   fashion industry would almost certainly benefit the most.As well as the boost to   baby clothing sales that we have seen from Prince George, a princess would be   able to set trends throughout her life, which will be great for the people who   designed her clothes or those who can make quick knock-off copies, he told The   Daily Telegraph.Like her mother and her grandmother, a princess would be   regarded as a fashion plate from birth.with designers registering a significant   uptick in sales whenever she steps out.Even the company that created the   receiving blanket for the couple's first child, Prince George, became   internationally famous after the infant was first presented in public.Of course,   all royals are destined to lead lives of extraordinary scrutiny.But the public   is likely to be much more exacting of a princess's moral character and   appearance.With Diana, Princess of Wales, this fascination led to near-constant   coverage of her post-divorce love life, and a level of surveillance that, some   posited, contributed to mental breakdown and anorexia.The clamour for Kate has   been relatively constrained, but is still ever-present: Cameras follow William's   wife everywhere, documenting everything from her morning sickness to.