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“Get your fucking ass up and work,” Kim Kardashian advised women. The couple have been public about their struggle to conceive with Montag lamenting on an episode last year of “The Hills: New Beginning,” “I’m trying to get pregnant and that’s not really happening for me,” according to Us Weekly. “To say we are all thrilled is an understatement.” “Gunner asked me why I was crying and I told him I was so happy because he is going to be a big brother!” she wrote. Montag said he was present when she tearfully shared the news with her husband. Montag and Pratt have a 4-year-old son, Gunner Stone. “I have been hoping and praying for this moment for so long!”
“My heart is overflowing with joy! I’m excited to share that I am pregnant!” Montag wrote in the caption on her verified Instagram account, which accompanied a picture of her on the cover of Us Weekly with her baby bump. The couple who met and fell in love on MTV’s hit “The Hills” which premiered in 2006, shared the news on social media. Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt have announced that they are pregnant with “Miracle baby #2.” How can “they” be pregnant? Is Spencer trans? I knew it had a tragic ending, but it wasn't what I expected.Īnyway, I love the music, and I'm curious to know more about the opera itself (and especially how it's viewed today). And here's a MARY!!!!! moment: at the point in the novel that later became "I Loves You, Porgy" I teared up thinking of the song.
Porgy was a great character and, at least in the novel, written with warmth and nuance. (The dialect was cringey at times.) I found it interesting that there were few white characters, and with the exception of an attorney, they were all more or less antagonists. I can see why people were offended by the story (and I had no idea that drug use was central to the plot), but considering a lot of stuff produced during that era. Was it too operatic (especially the 1935 production) for theater-going audiences of the 1930s? Was the all-black cast a turn-off? It doesn't appear that the 1935 Broadway production was very successful, nor was the 1942 revival, but if I am wrong please set me straight. (I also plan to watch some staged versions of the opera, and maybe the 1959 film version.) I'm a big fan of jazz and so know several of the songs from Porgy and Bess, but knew very little about the plot, so I decided to read DuBose Heyward's novel Porgy.