翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Do You Love What You Feel (Inner City song)
・ Do You Love Your Wife?
・ Do You Miss Me?
・ Do You Miss New York?
・ Do You Party?
・ Do You Realise
・ Do You Realize??
・ Do You Really Like It?
・ Do You Really Want Me (Show Respect)
・ Do You Really Want to Hurt Me
・ Do You Really Want to Know?
・ Do You Remember (Jarryd James song)
・ Do You Remember (Jay Sean song)
・ Do You Remember Dolly Bell?
・ Do You Remember Laurie Zimmer?
Do You Remember Love (film)
・ Do You Remember Me?
・ Do You Remember Me? (film)
・ Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll Radio?
・ Do You Remember the First Time?
・ Do You Remember the First Time? (The Vampire Diaries)
・ Do You Remember These
・ Do You Remember Walter?
・ Do You Remember?
・ Do You Remember? (album)
・ Do You Remember? (Phil Collins song)
・ Do You Remember? (The Beach Boys song)
・ Do You Right
・ Do You See
・ Do You See Me?


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Do You Remember Love (film) : ウィキペディア英語版
Do You Remember Love (film)

''Do You Remember Love'' is a 1985 television film, starring Joanne Woodward and Richard Kiley. It won three Emmy Awards, the Humanitas Prize, the Writers Guild of America Award, and a Peabody Award.
==Synopsis==
Barbara Wyatt-Hollis wins the hearts of her academic colleagues with her quick wit and irresistible but definitely quirky personality. Though popular with her students, she might not have gotten tenure if she were not a truly distinguished poet. Barbara has won many prizes and now has been nominated for the Longfellow Award, given only once a decade.
Barbara is lovingly married to George, who runs his own machine shop, and is more than happy to have Barbara as the star of the family. George couldn't be more proud when he learns that Barbara is a nominee for poetry's number-one award, which he's sure she'll win. In the midst of the excitement, Barbara's mother, Lorraine, breaks her hip. George suggests that Lorraine convalesce at Barbara and George's home. Uneasy about that, Barbara agrees.
It starts with Lorraine discovering that Barbara's sugar bowl is full of salt. Lorraine notices a lot of odd little things about Barbara's behavior. The main thing is that her daughter is uncharacteristically quick to anger. Lorraine asks George if he hasn't noticed the changes in Barbara, but he brushes it off. But George has indeed noticed the changes in Barbara and is most troubled by her temper, which has always had an edge, but seems now to be careening out of control. One evening she gets so angry during a squabble that she bites her husband.
George talks to his campus-psychiatrist friend, who observes Barbara at a party and tells George of a specialist he knows. Barbara agrees that something may be wrong. After many tests, the specialist concludes through the process of elimination that Barbara has Alzheimer's. In an effort to cope with a mind that is constantly losing things, Barbara begins to put labels, instructions, and reminders, everywhere—on bottles, doors, the telephone. George discovers a note she has been carrying up her sleeve. On it, Barbara has written "George".
One day, George finds a letter among Barbara's gardening tools. It is the notification that Barbara has won the Longfellow Award. It requests that Barbara accept her prize at an awards ceremony and, of course, deliver an acceptance speech. Barbara's son argues that his mother shouldn't say anything at the ceremony because she'll make a fool of herself. But Barbara is determined not only to go but to read the acceptance speech that she, herself, will write.
On the night of the awards presentation, Barbara forgets some friends' names but seems to have summoned up every unused bit of mental acuity she has. When the emcee finishes introducing Barbara, all eyes are on her, waiting for her to take her place in history. Barbara goes to the podium, but then freezes. Her mind betrays her. Realizing that Barbara cannot make her speech, George goes quickly to the podium and introduces himself. George tells the audience that Barbara has Alzheimer's disease and that he will read the words that Barbara has written. It's all he can do to hold it together when he gets to the end of his wife's speech: "I've lived better than anyone I know. I've had the rare chance to say every damn thing I ever wanted to say. And people listened. Most of all I have been loved. As laughter is our purest invention, love is our purest gift. Though I have forgotten many things, I do still remember love."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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