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Bruce Thomas Eason (60) & tynesha holbert (21)



Last Updated: 12/23/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 60
Sign: Capricorn

City: LONG BEACH
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 9/9/2006

Blog Archive
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Saturday, December 12, 2009 

Category: Life
It is an honor and a privilege to announce that I (Bruce Eason) have been cast in the role of Simon Stimson in the upcoming Long Beach Playhouse production of Our Town. For more information visit the Long Beach Playhouse website www.lbph.com.

It is also an honor and a privilege to announce that the film Lime Light
in which I play Bruce Alexander will premier at the Newport Beach Film Festival(
www.newportbeachfilmfest.com) in April.

“An orgasm a day keeps the doctor away." ~Mae West~
 
"Sex is like snow, you never know how many inches you're going to get or how long it will last." ~Author Unknown~
 
“A slave’s life is mostly composed of patience and study. Yes, study. If not with actual books, then following the example of greater, senior slaves. Or learning every nuance of their owner’s character, so that they can more completely and seamlessly offer themselves at the right time and in the right manner.”   ~Laura Antoniou~
 
"Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it." ~George Bernard Shaw~
 
"Invest in a feather duster -- the possibilities are endless.” ~Anne Rice~
 
"Happiness lies neither in vice nor in virtue; but in the manner we appreciate the one and the other, and the choice we make pursuant to our individual organization."  ~Marquis de Sade~
 
We would love to get a holiday card from you.
 
Be well!
 
Bruce Eason & tynesha holbert
 
Contact Information:
Bruce Thomas Eason & tynesha holbert
3350 E. 7th St., #201
Long Beach, Ca 90804
Tel: (562) 212-5507
 
Disclaimer and Disclosure: It is not our intent for anyone who does not want to receive email from us to receive it. If you are currently on our mailing list and do not want to be we will be happy to remove you. Just drop us an email, write us or give me a call.
Friday, September 18, 2009 
"Repression is not the way to virtue. When people restrain themselves out of fear, their lives are by necessity diminished. Only through freely chosen discipline can life be enjoyed and still kept within the bounds of reason."   ~Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi~
 
"Respect your efforts, respect yourself. Self-respect leads to self-discipline. When you have both firmly under your belt, that's real power." ~Clint Eastwood
 
"Do you consider yourself a disciplined guy? Do you get up every day and ..go to work'?" "Well, yeah. I try to get up every day."  ~Dick Cavett and Jimi Hendrix~

"That government is best which governs the least, because its people discipline themselves." ~Thomas Jefferson~
  "A stern discipline pervades all nature, which is a little cruel that it may be very kind." ~Edmund Spenser~
 
"Seek freedom and become captive of your desires, seek discipline and find your liberty." ~Frank Herbert~
 
"The body is shaped, disciplined, honored, and in time, trusted." ~Martha Graham~


 
Have a great week! 

Bruce Eason

brucethomaseason@yahoo.com
www.myspace.com/bruceeason
Saturday, September 12, 2009 
It is an honor and a privilege to announce that I have been cast in the roles of Don Darwin and the lawyer in the upcoming Long Beach Playhouse production of "Enter Laughing" directed by Glendele Way-Agle.

For  information and tickets contact the Long Beach Playhouse @ (562) 494-1014 or  www.lbph.com

Thanks for your continued support.
 
Bruce Eason
 
 

Tuesday, May 26, 2009 

Wilde’s Satire “Windermere” Masters Concept Of Deceit

By James Scarborough

Published: Wednesday, May 20, 2009 3:03 PM PDT

    Oscar Wilde’s satire “Lady Windermere’s Fan,” staged at the Long Beach Playhouse’s Mainstage Theatre, is worth seeing if for no other reason than to marvel at Director Darlene Hunter-Chaffee’s masterful dissection of the concept of deceit.

    She shows its complex, many-faceted nature. We’re not so much surprised that those stolid Victorians had skeletons in their closets, a little action on the side, things they’ve kept hidden for decades.

    We’re surprised that, if you scratch the surface, it’s everywhere, in the most innocent utterances, in things not said.

    Deceit that ranges from the peccadilloes men tell their wives who inquire what they were doing, where, with whom, and at what time, to lies fathers tell infant daughters about why their mother isn’t around anymore. To things-not-spoken, to unarticulated truths, the better to spare one’s feelings, if not one’s sanity.

    What launches the story’s dramatic arc is how each character confronts it. Some react true to form, others acquit themselves admirably, others pretzel around it.

    To an unusual extent, almost anything stated will ruin the plot.

    So, to tread delicately, suffice it to say that an otherwise stalwart husband, Lord Windermere (Travis Wade), married to his giddy-in-love Lady (Kate Thomsen), is party to a secret.

    It concerns his wife, with whom he’s just had a child, as well as a lady-in-red, Mrs. Eylynne (Yvonne Robertson), to whom he’s been paying exorbitant sums of money on the sly. His skulking about as a result of said secret convinces his wife that it means one thing (adultery).

    It doesn’t.

    It means something else entirely different — something his wife never learns because it would shatter her life. Something her husband doesn’t reveal because of its tawdriness, something the lady-in-red doesn’t unravel because of a sudden, unexpected act of kindness.

    The moral of the story? That sometimes there are things that are better left unsaid.

    What shouldn’t be left unsaid is the staging. From top to bottom, the acting caught each and every nuance of outrage and calumny.

    As Lady Windermere, delightful newcomer Thomsen has to make her character beyond reproach, lest she lapse into hypocrisy and the satire lapse into buffoonery.

    She does, she doesn’t, it won’t.

    Another delightful newcomer, Wade took Lord Windermere’s pickle of a predicament — to squeal or not to squeal — and somehow got him to smell like a rose.

    And Robertson’s Mrs. Erlynne! How she got her to be both gold digger and, for a nonce, Mother Teresa, is beyond me.

    The visual period-ness is spot-on as well. Andrew Otero’s stage, with truncated column and wall tops give the illusion of a spacious drawing room on that three-sided stage while Donna Fritsche’s costumes fill the space with billowy, frilly dress and black and white gentlemanly attire.

    P.S. People may rave about Twitter’s tweets but there’s simply the Victorian version of handwritten notes delivered by footmen.

    Performances are at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday. The show runs until June 13. Tickets are $20-$22.

    The Playhouse is at 5021 E. Anaheim St.

    For more information, call 494-1014 or visit www.lbph.com online.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009 

We open Friday. Come and see our show!

Ticket info @ www.lbph.com

Bruce

Saturday, May 02, 2009 

Category: Life

Resources for Personal and Financial Development

Recommended Books

Allen, Robert (2005)  Multiple Streams of Income: How to Generate a Lifetime of Unlimited Wealth! , John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Canfield, Jack, et al (2000) The Power of Focus: How to Hit Your Business, Personal and Financial Targets With Absolute Certainty, Health Communications

Clason, George (2008) The Richest Man in Babylon,  Classic House Books

Conwell, Russell (2009) Acres of Diamonds, Seven Treasures Publications

Covey, Steven (2004) Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change, Free Press

Davidson, Jeff (2001) The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Managing Your Time (3rd Edition), Alpha Books

Davidson, Jeff (1998) The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Reaching Your Goals, Alpha Books

Hill, Napoleon (2007) Think and Grow Rich, Wilder Publications

Hill, Napoleon & Stone, W. Clement (1987) Success Through a Positive Mental Attitude Pocket Books

Laut, Phil (2005) Money is My Friend for the New Millenium (2nd Edition), Golden Mastermind Seminars

Mayer, Jeffrey J. (1995) Time Management for Dummies (2nd Edition) IDG Books Worldwide

McKay, Harvey (1988) Swim with the Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive Collins Business Essentials

Mundis, Jerrold (1996) Earn What You Deserve: How to Stop Underearning and Start Thriving, Bantam

Mundis, Jerrold (2003) How to Get Out of Debt, Stay Out of Debt, and Live Prosperously Bantam

Orman, Suze (2006) The Nine Steps to Financial Freedom: Practical and Spiritual Steps So You Can Stop Worrying, Three Rivers Press

Seligman, Martin (2006) Learned Optimism: How to Change Your Mind and Your Life, Vintage

Stanley, Thomas J. (2001) The Millionaire Mind, Andrews McMeel Publishing

Tyson, Eric (2008) Investing for Dummies (5th Edition), Wiley

Tyson, Eric (2006) Personal Finance for Dummies (5th Edition), Wiley

Tyson, Eric & Shell, Jim (2008) Small Business for Dummies (3rd Edition), Wiley

Waitley, Denis (1986) The Psychology of Winning, Berkley

Recommended Websites

Jack Canfield: www.jackcanfield.com

Steven Covey: www.franklincovey.com

Jeff Davidson: www.jeffdavidson.com

Phil Laut : www.phillaut.com

Jeffrey Meyer: www.succeedinginbusiness.com

Harvey MacKay: www.harveymackay.com

Suze Orman: www.suzeorman.com

Martin Seligman: www.positivepsychology.org

Brian Tracy: www.briantracy.com

Denis Waitley: www.waitley.com

Thank you! I welcome your communication and feedback. Please feel free to contact me with any comments or suggestions.

Bruce Thomas Eason

Life, Health & Disability Insurance

3350 E. 7th St., #201

Long Beach, CA 90804

Tel: (562) 212-5507

email: brucethomaseason@yahoo.com

CA Lic. #0572028

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, May 01, 2009 

Category: Life
RIP Danny Gans
(1956-2009)
Friday, May 01, 2009 
Thursday, April 30, 2009 
Wednesday, April 29, 2009 

Category: Life
Children writing about the ocean

1) - I drew a picture of an octopus.  It has eight testicles. (Kelly,
age 6)

2) - Oysters' balls are called pearls. (Jerry, age 6)

3) - If you are surrounded by ocean you are an Island . If you don't
have ocean all round you, you are incontinent. ( Wayne , age 7)

4) - Sharks are ugly and mean, and have big teeth, just like Emily
Richardson. She's not my friend any more. (Kylie, age 6)

5) - A dolphin breaths through an asshole on the top of its head.
(Billy, age 8)

6) - My uncle goes out in his boat with 2 other men and a woman and
pots and comes back with crabs. (Millie, age 6)

7) - When ships had sails, they used to use the trade winds to cross
the ocean.. Sometimes when the wind didn't blow the sailors  would
whistle to make the wind come; My brother said they would have been
better off eating beans. (William, age 7)

8) - Mermaids live in the ocean. I like mermaids. They are beautiful
and I like their shiny tails, but how on earth do mermaids get pregnant?
Like, really? (Helen, age 6)

9) - I'm not going to write about the ocean.  My baby brother is always
crying, my Dad keeps yelling at my Mom, and my big sister  has just got
pregnant, so I can't think w hat to write. (Amy, age 6)

10) - Some fish are dangerous. Jellyfish can sting. Electric eels can
give you a shock.  They have to live in caves under the sea  where I
think they have to plug themselves into chargers.  (Christopher, age 7)

11) - When you go swimming in the ocean, it is very cold, and it makes
my willy small. (Kevin, age 6)

12)- Divers have to be safe when they go under the water. Divers can't
go down alone, so they have to go down on each other. 
(Becky, age 8)

13)-On vacation my Mom went water skiing.  She fell off when she was
going very fast.  She says she won't do it again because water  fired
right up her big fat ass. (Julie, age 7)

14) - The ocean is made up of water and fish. Why the fish don't drown
I don't know.(Bobby, age 6)

15)- My dad was a sailor on the ocean.  He knows all about the ocean.
What he doesn't know is why he quit being a sailor and  married my mom.
(James, age 7)