He starred in the 1996 production of " Salad Days " at the Vaudeville Theatre, and in " Tom Foolery " ( Jermyn Street and national tour ).
32.
What began as mountaintop tom-foolery has become an institution, with sports like snowboarding, freestyle skiing and skiboarding slowly becoming accessible to more than just Generation Xers _ and potentially profitable to all involved.
33.
"The talk that came out from the summit of international outlaws . . . shows that they are in a hurry to commit the foolery of aggression on Iraq, " he told reporters.
34.
The Queen thanked him for his efforts but said sadly : " When thou dost feel creeping time at thy gate, these fooleries shall please thee less I am past relish for such matters ."
35.
He previously used a number of stage names while growing up such as " Dirty-D, Bassics, Tommy " and " Tom Foolery " but they were never used professionally.
36.
Guinness said it was joining in the British tradition of April foolery in print and that the Financial Times jumped the gun on a hoax press release that was supposed to appear Wednesday _ April Fool's Day.
37.
Her first single gig was in 1960 at the Tallyrand where she sang for 1 ?years before she was approached by Bert Coleman, proprietor at the Top of the Foolery where she performed for 9 ?years.
38.
The recent paucity of April Foolery reflected an unwillingness to risk offending consumer sensibilities, which seem these days to be more fragile than fine crystal if a spate of complaints _ and ads withdrawn under fire _ are any indication.
39.
Names of the unauthorized versions include, " One-Eyed Jack, " " Jack Foolery, " and " Jack Off . " In One-Eyed Jack, the board is constructed using actual playing cards.
40.
"The Daily Show, " with its deadpan reports from a comic corral of field correspondents and sidelong glances at the day's headlines, has developed a reputation for offering some of the shrewdest political foolery on the small screen.