Topic : Boring

Beating Time

British conductor Sir Thomas Beecham wasn’t a great admirer of the music of his fellow Briton, composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. During the rehearsal of a Williams symphony, Beecham seemed to be doing little more than listlessly beating time. In fact, he was still beating time after the orchestra had stopped.

“Why aren’t you playing?” Beecham mildly asked the first violinist.

“It’s finished, Sir Thomas,” came the reply.

Beecham looked down at his score. “So it is!”

Today in the Word, September 16, 1993

Boring Sermon

The Rev. Dr. Robert South, while preaching one day in 1689, looked up from his notes to observe that his entire congregation was fast asleep—including the King! Appropriately mortified by this discovery, he interrupted his sermon to call out, “Lord Lauderdale, rouse yourself. You snore so loudly that you will wake the King.”

Source unknown

Percentages of Boredom

U. S. News and World Report, June 24, 1991, p. 14

Yawn

To make a long story short, yawn.

Source unknown

Slow Movie

Director Billy Wilder was asked how he liked a new film. “To give you an idea,” he said, “the film started at eight o’clock. I looked at my watch at midnight—and it was only 8:15.”

Source unknown

Bare Cupboard

Drama critic Clive Barnes’s one-word review of a play in London called “the Cupboard: “Bare.”

Source unknown



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