- Webster, Ebenezer (American revolutionary)
Daniel Webster: Youth and early career: …ninth of 10 children of Ebenezer Webster, a veteran of the American Revolution, farmer and tavern-keeper, and leading townsman. Dark-complexioned “little Black Dan,” a rather frail boy, became the pet of his parents and older brothers and sisters, some of whom taught him to read at an early age. He…
- Webster, Hannah (American writer)
Hannah Webster Foster was an American novelist whose single successful novel, though highly sentimental, broke with some of the conventions of its time and type. Hannah Webster received the genteel education prescribed for young girls of that day. In April 1785 she married the Reverend John Foster,
- Webster, Jean (American writer)
Jean Webster was an American writer who is best remembered for her fiction best-seller Daddy-Long-Legs, which was also successful in stage and motion picture adaptations. Webster adopted the name Jean while attending the Lady Jane Grey School in Binghamton, New York. In 1901 she graduated from
- Webster, John (English dramatist)
John Webster was an English dramatist whose The White Devil (c. 1609–c. 1612) and The Duchess of Malfi (c. 1612/13, published 1623) are generally regarded as the paramount 17th-century English tragedies apart from those of Shakespeare. Little is known of Webster’s life. His preface to Monuments of
- Webster, Marie (American quilter)
Marie Webster was an American quilt designer and historian, author of the first book entirely devoted to American quilts. Marie Daugherty was educated at local schools in Wabash, Indiana. Unable to attend college because of an eye ailment, she was tutored in Latin and Greek and read widely. She was
- Webster, Michael Lewis (American football player)
Mike Webster was an American professional football player who won four Super Bowls (1975, 1976, 1979, and 1980) as a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL) and who is considered one of the greatest centers in league history. He is notable not just for his
- Webster, Mike (American football player)
Mike Webster was an American professional football player who won four Super Bowls (1975, 1976, 1979, and 1980) as a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL) and who is considered one of the greatest centers in league history. He is notable not just for his
- Webster, Noah (American lexicographer)
Noah Webster was an American lexicographer known for his American Spelling Book (1783) and his American Dictionary of the English Language, 2 vol. (1828; 2nd ed., 1840). Webster was instrumental in giving American English a dignity and vitality of its own. Both his speller and dictionary reflected
- Webster, William H. (United States government official)
Los Angeles Riots of 1992: …an official investigation headed by William Webster, former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation—was forced to resign. Also in the wake of the riots, a dispirited Bradley, the city’s first African American mayor, chose not to run for a sixth term. Ultimately, King received a $3.8 million settlement from…
- Webster, William Hedgcock (United States government official)
Los Angeles Riots of 1992: …an official investigation headed by William Webster, former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation—was forced to resign. Also in the wake of the riots, a dispirited Bradley, the city’s first African American mayor, chose not to run for a sixth term. Ultimately, King received a $3.8 million settlement from…
- Webster–Ashburton Treaty (United States-United Kingdom [1842])
Webster–Ashburton Treaty, (1842), treaty between the U.S. and Great Britain establishing the northeastern boundary of the U.S. and providing for Anglo–U.S. cooperation in the suppression of the slave trade. The treaty established the present boundary between Maine and New Brunswick, granted the
- webworm (insect)
Lepidoptera: Annotated classification: Family Crambidae (webworms) Approximately 11,600 species worldwide; small, often abundant moths, many larvae producing silk webbing in feeding sites; subfamily Crambinae contains almost 1,900 species, larvae feeding mainly on roots, grasses, or mosses on the ground or boring into stems of grasses, sedges, or rushes; subfamily Pyraustinae…
- WeChat (instant messaging service)
WeChat, messaging app owned by technology and entertainment conglomerate Tencent and developed by Tencent executive Allen Zhang. WeChat has well over one billion monthly users, the majority of whom are based in China. The app allows users to exchange text messages, make video and audio calls, play
- Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (psychology)
David Wechsler: …another adult intelligence test, the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), with the same structure as his earlier scale but standardized with a different population, including 10 percent nonwhites to reflect the U.S. population. (The earlier test had been standardized for an all-white population.) He contributed to the revision of the…
- Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (psychology)
David Wechsler: …of his intelligence tests, the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence, was issued in 1967 as an adaptation of the children’s scale for use with very young children. His intelligence tests continue to be updated for contemporary use.
- Wechsler, David (American psychologist)
David Wechsler was an American psychologist and inventor of several widely used intelligence tests for adults and children. Wechsler studied at the City College of New York and Columbia University, receiving his doctorate in 1925. He began a long association with Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital in
- Wechsler–Bellevue Intelligence Scale (psychology)
David Wechsler: …intelligence tests known as the Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Scale. The original battery was geared specifically to the measurement of adult intelligence, for clinical use. He rejected the idea that there is an ideal mental age against which individual performance can be measured, and he defined normal intelligence as the mean test…
- WeCrashed (American television miniseries)
Anne Hathaway: WeCrashed and The Idea of You: …starred with Jared Leto in WeCrashed (2022), a TV miniseries about the rise and fall of WeWork, a company that promoted shared office space. Her other credits from 2022 include the family drama Armageddon Time, which centers on a six grader’s coming-of-age and addresses issues of privilege and racism.
- Wedde, Ian (New Zealand author)
New Zealand literature: Poetry: …of the most talented were Ian Wedde, whose energy, formal inventiveness, and stylistic charm in the use of spoken language extended the range of New Zealand poetry, and Bill Manhire, a witty understater and unsettler of reality. Others also appearing then included Murray Edmond, a dour but resourceful pupil of…
- Weddell Gyre (Antarctic ocean current)
ocean current: The subpolar gyres: The best-formed is the Weddell Gyre of the Southern Ocean. The Antarctic coastal current flows toward the west. The northward-flowing current off the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula carries cold Antarctic coastal water into the circumpolar belt. Another cyclonic gyre occurs north of the Ross Sea.
- Weddell Polynya (polynya, Weddell Sea, Atlantic Ocean)
polynya: …best exemplified by the vast Weddell Polynya in the antarctic Weddell Sea.
- Weddell Sea (sea, Atlantic Ocean)
Weddell Sea, large embayment of the Antarctic coastline that forms a deep southward extension of the Southern Ocean. Centering at about 73° S 45° W, the Weddell Sea is bounded on the west by the Antarctic Peninsula of West Antarctica, on the east by Coats Land of East Antarctica, and on the extreme
- Weddell seal (mammal)
Weddell seal, (Leptonychotes weddellii), nonmigratory earless seal (family Phocidae) found around the South Pole, on or near the coast of Antarctica. The Weddell seal is a rotund animal that grows to about 3 metres (10 feet) in length and about 400 kg (880 pounds) in weight; the female is larger
- Weddell, James (British explorer)
James Weddell was a British explorer and seal hunter who set a record for navigation into the Antarctic and for whom the Weddell Sea is named. Weddell commanded the sealing brig “Jane” on three Antarctic voyages, the success of the first (1819–21) permitting him to buy a share in the vessel. On the
- Wedderburn, Sir William (British administrator)
India: The early Congress movement: Sir William Wedderburn (1838–1918), Gokhale’s closest British adviser and himself later elected twice to serve as president of the Congress, and William Wordsworth, principal of Elphinstone College, both appeared as observers. Most Britons in India, however, either ignored the Congress Party and its resolutions as…
- Weddigen, Otto (German naval officer)
Otto Weddigen was a German submarine commander whose feat of sinking three British armoured cruisers in about an hour, during the second month of World War I, made him one of the most famous of submarine heroes. Weddigen entered the German navy in 1901 and participated from the beginning in the
- wedding (ritual)
Western dance: Jewish dance: Weddings provided another important occasion for ritual dancing. Dancing with the bride was considered an act of devotion, and the officiating rabbi always complied with pleasure. During the Diaspora of the early Christian Era many of the ritual dances disappeared, but the bridal dance continued…
- Wedding Banquet, The (film by Lee [1993])
Ang Lee: …Pushing Hands), Hsi Yen (1993; The Wedding Banquet), and Yinshi nan nu (1994; Eat Drink Man Woman). After earning international acclaim for the latter two movies, Lee was chosen to direct a screen adaptation of the Jane Austen novel Sense and Sensibility (1995). The film—which starred Emma Thompson, Kate
- Wedding Bell Blues (song by Nyro)
Laura Nyro: …notably the Fifth Dimension (“Wedding Bell Blues” and “Stoned Soul Picnic”), Barbra Streisand (“Stoney End”), Three Dog Night (“Eli’s Coming”), and Blood, Sweat and Tears (“And When I Die”). A wayward yet reclusive artist, Nyro resisted pressure to streamline her songs for mass consumption. She was shaken after being…
- Wedding Candles, The (painting by Chagall)
Marc Chagall: Late career of Marc Chagall: …again, as the bride in The Wedding Candles (1945) and Nocturne (1947).
- Wedding Crashers (film by Dobkin [2005])
Bradley Cooper: …in such buddy movies as Wedding Crashers (2005) and Failure to Launch (2006). The films raised Cooper’s profile, and in 2009 he scored his breakthrough with the highly lucrative The Hangover, which centres on a group of men who search for their lost friend after waking from a bachelor party…
- Wedding Dance, The (painting by Bruegel)
Western painting: Low Countries: …months and recurs in “The Wedding Dance” (1566; Detroit Institute of Arts) and “Peasant Dance” and “Peasant Wedding” (both in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna).
- Wedding Dress, The (play by Rodrigues)
Brazilian literature: The theatre: …drama Vestido de noiva (1943; The Wedding Dress), with its revolutionary staging and open treatment of sexuality, became one of Brazil’s most important dramas. Concerned with issues of class, machismo, sexual deviancy, incest, violence, and abortion, Rodrigues’s audacious plays have been praised for their different narrative levels. Rodrigues was a…
- Wedding March (work by Mendelssohn)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream: … queen Titania, and the “Wedding March,” written to accompany the multiple weddings at the end of the play, recaptured the magical spirit of the overture. The complete set also includes a nimble fairies’ scherzo, a haunting nocturne rich with horns, a buoyant clowns’ dance, and a farewell finale. The…
- Wedding Night, The (film by Vidor [1935])
King Vidor: Early sound features: The elaborate romance The Wedding Night (1935) was made for producer Samuel Goldwyn, who intended it to be a showcase for Anna Sten (in her third American movie), a Russian-born actress he unsuccessfully tried to turn into the next Greta Garbo. Despite the presence of Gary Cooper, the…
- Wedding of Samson, The (painting by Rembrandt)
Rembrandt: Night Watch: The Wedding of Samson (1638) can be seen as Rembrandt’s attempt to surpass Leonardo in the challenge set by this compositional problem and as an effort to accomplish a much livelier scene than Leonardo had achieved in his Last Supper.
- Wedding of Zein & Other Stories, The (work by Ṣāliḥ)
al-Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ: The Wedding of Zein & Other Stories) evoke the warmth, compassion, humour, and sadness of traditional Sudanese Arabic life, examining authority and unwritten codes through its beautifully structured narrative rhythms. In the 1970s he wrote two short volumes, translated into English as Bandarshah, and later…
- Wedding Party, The (film by De Palma, Leach and Monroe [1969])
Brian De Palma: Early work: …Cynthia Monroe) the feature-length film The Wedding Party (1964; released 1969). The comedy featured early career performances by Robert De Niro and Jill Clayburgh. De Palma’s first solo features were Murder à la Mod (1968) and Greetings (1968), the latter of which was set in Greenwich Village and starred De…
- Wedding Planner, The (film by Shankman [2001])
Jennifer Lopez: Selena and film stardom: …she gained widespread praise for The Wedding Planner (2001), her successful first attempt at romantic comedy. That release was quickly followed by the romantic drama Angel Eyes. These films paired her with many of the most bankable and respected leading actors of the 1990s and early 2000s, including George Clooney,…
- wedding ring (jewelry)
ring: …as symbols of betrothal and marital fidelity.
- Wedding Singer, The (film by Coraci [1998])
Drew Barrymore: Stardom: …to romantic comedy, starring in The Wedding Singer as the humble waitress Julia, who is torn between her rude fiancé and the funny and considerate wedding singer (played by Adam Sandler) who befriends her. She continued as a romantic lead in Ever After (1998), a Cinderella-like story, and Never Been…
- Wedding, A (film by Altman [1978])
Robert Altman: M*A*S*H and the 1970s: A Wedding (1978) revolved around dozens of characters, and the allegorical science-fiction mystery Quintet (1979) starred Newman. Neither H.E.A.L.T.H. (1979), despite a cast that included James Garner, Carol Burnett, Lauren Bacall, Glenda Jackson, and Alfre Woodard, nor A Perfect Couple (1979) were given a theatrical…
- Wedding, Ryan James (Canadian snowboarder and criminal)
Olympic Snowboarder Wanted for Drug Trafficking: Ryan James Wedding was not accused of doping during his snowboarding career, but the Canadian Olympian is now on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list for drug trafficking.
- Wedding, The (book by West)
Dorothy West: …book that was to become The Wedding. In the early 1990s Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who had seen West’s work in the Gazette and who was working as an editor at Doubleday in New York, encouraged her to finish the book but did not live to see it published. West dedicated…
- Wedding, The (work by Stravinsky)
Igor Stravinsky: Life and career: The Wedding, a ballet cantata begun by Stravinsky in 1914 but completed only in 1923 after years of uncertainty over its instrumentation, is based on the texts of Russian village wedding songs. The “farmyard burlesque” Renard (1916) is similarly based on Russian folk idioms, while…
- Wedding, The (play by Wyspiański)
Stanisław Wyspiański: Wesele (1901; The Wedding, filmed in 1973 by Andrzej Wajda), his greatest and most popular play, premiered in 1901. Its story was suggested by the actual marriage of the poet Lucjan Rydel to a peasant girl in a village near Kraków. The marriage is used symbolically to…
- Weddington, Sarah (American lawyer)
Sarah Weddington was an American lawyer, speaker, educator, and writer best known for her role as the plaintiff’s counsel in the landmark case Roe v. Wade, which, in 1973, overturned antiabortion statutes in Texas and made abortion legal throughout the United States. Weddington was raised in a
- Wedekind, Benjamin Franklin (German actor and dramatist)
Frank Wedekind was a German actor and dramatist who became an intense personal force in the German artistic world on the eve of World War I. A direct forebear of the modern Theatre of the Absurd, Wedekind employed episodic scenes, fragmented dialogue, distortion, and caricature in his dramas, which
- Wedekind, Frank (German actor and dramatist)
Frank Wedekind was a German actor and dramatist who became an intense personal force in the German artistic world on the eve of World War I. A direct forebear of the modern Theatre of the Absurd, Wedekind employed episodic scenes, fragmented dialogue, distortion, and caricature in his dramas, which
- Wedekindellina (fossil foraminiferan genus)
Wedekindellina, genus of fusulinid foraminiferans, an extinct group of protozoans that possessed a hard shell of relatively large size; they are especially characteristic as fossils in deposits from the Pennsylvanian Subperiod (318 million to 299 million years ago) of midcontinental North America.
- Wedel-Jarlsberg, Herman, Count (Norwegian statesman)
Herman, Count Wedel-Jarlsberg was a Norwegian patriot and statesman. He was the leading advocate of Norwegian-Swedish union in the last years of the Danish-Norwegian state and the first Norwegian governor (statholder) in the Norwegian-Swedish union (1814–1905). Early in the 19th century, as the
- Wedel-Jarlsberg, Johan Caspar Herman, Landgreve (Norwegian statesman)
Herman, Count Wedel-Jarlsberg was a Norwegian patriot and statesman. He was the leading advocate of Norwegian-Swedish union in the last years of the Danish-Norwegian state and the first Norwegian governor (statholder) in the Norwegian-Swedish union (1814–1905). Early in the 19th century, as the
- Wedemeyer, Albert Coady (United States general and statesman)
Albert Coady Wedemeyer was an American military leader who was the principal author of the 1941 Victory Program, a comprehensive war plan devised for the U.S. entry into World War II. After graduating from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point (1919), Wedemeyer was assigned to Tientsin, China,
- wedge (mechanics)
wedge, in mechanics, device that tapers to a thin edge, usually made of metal or wood, and used for splitting, lifting, or tightening, as to secure a hammer head onto its handle. Along with the lever, wheel and axle, pulley, and screw, the wedge is considered one of the five simple machines. The
- wedge ice (ice formation)
permafrost: Ice wedges: …is that formed in large ice wedges or masses with parallel or subparallel foliation structures. Most foliated ice masses occur as wedge-shaped, vertical, or inclined sheets or dikes 2.5 cm (about 1 inch) to 3 metres wide and 0.3 to 9 metres (1 to 29.5 feet) high when viewed in…
- Wedge, The (Finnish literary group)
Finnish literature: The early 20th century: …of left-wing writers known as Kiila (“The Wedge”) was formed, most of their important work appearing after the war (e.g., Elvi Sinervo’s novel Viljami Vaihdokas [1946]). Haanpää’s work also expressed left-wing ideas, as did that of the period’s most notable dramatist, Hella Wuolijoki, who collaborated in 1940 and 1941 with…
- wedge-shaped beetle (insect)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Ripiphoridae (wedge-shaped beetles) About 400 species, many with specialized parasitic habits on other insects; complicated life cycle; examples Pelecotoma, Metoecus. Family Salpingidae (narrow-waisted bark beetles) Superficial resemblance to Carabidae (ground beetles); adults and larvae predatory; adults
- wedge-tailed eagle (bird)
kangaroo: Common features: The wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax) is one of the macropodids’ few natural predators.
- Wedgeworth, Mary Marsha (United States senator)
Marsha Blackburn is an American politician elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2018. She is the first woman to have been elected senator for Tennessee and began representing the state in that body in 2019. In 2024 Blackburn comfortably won reelection against Democratic challenger Gloria
- Wedgwood ware (stoneware)
Wedgwood ware, English stoneware, including creamware, black basaltes, and jasperware, made by the Staffordshire factories originally established by Josiah Wedgwood at Burslem, at Etruria, and finally at Barlaston, all in Staffordshire. In the decade of its first production, the 1760s, Wedgwood
- Wedgwood, Josiah (English craftsman)
Josiah Wedgwood was an English pottery designer and manufacturer, outstanding in his scientific approach to pottery making and known for his exhaustive researches into materials, logical deployment of labour, and sense of business organization. The youngest child of the potter Thomas Wedgwood,
- Wedgwood, Thomas (British physicist)
history of photography: Photogenic drawing: …son of the famous potter Josiah Wedgwood, reported his experiments in recording images on paper or leather sensitized with silver nitrate. He could record silhouettes of objects placed on the paper, but he was not able to make them permanent. Sir Humphry Davy published a paper in the Journal of…
- Wedgwoodarbeit (German pottery)
pottery: 18th-century developments: …produced a glazed version called Wedgwoodarbeiten. Less influential was the red stoneware (rosso antico), which sometimes had an enamelled decoration of classical subjects, and caneware, a buff stoneware.
- Wednesday (day of the week)
Wednesday, fourth day of the week
- Wednesday (American television series)
Tim Burton: …television, directing several episodes of Wednesday (2022– ), a comedy-horror series inspired by the TV show The Addams Family (1964–66).
- Wee Willie Winkie (film by Ford [1937])
Cesar Romero: …appeared with Shirley Temple in Wee Willie Winkie (1937) and The Little Princess (1939) and with Sonja Henie in Happy Landing (1938) and Wintertime (1943). Romero was also featured in such musicals as The Great American Broadcast (1941), Weekend in Havana (1941), and
- weed (drug)
marijuana, crude drug composed of the leaves and flowers of plants in the genus Cannabis. The term marijuana is sometimes used interchangeably with cannabis; however, the latter refers specifically to the plant genus, which comprises C. sativa and, by some classifications, C. indica and C.
- weed (botany)
weed, general term for any plant growing where it is not wanted. Ever since humans first attempted the cultivation of plants, they have had to fight the invasion by weeds into areas chosen for crops. Some unwanted plants later were found to have virtues not originally suspected and so were removed
- weed control
weed: Modern weed control can be classified as mechanical, chemical, or biological.
- Weed for Burning, A (work by Detrez)
Conrad Detrez: …is L’Herbe à brûler (1978; A Weed for Burning), in which he recounts with carnivalesque glee the fatal return of his disillusioned protagonist—who has wandered for years in South America—to a Europe sapped of its revolutionary zeal. Criticism of leftist intelligentsia continued to be a theme in Detrez’s later work.…
- Weed, Thurlow (American journalist and politician)
Thurlow Weed was an American journalist and politician who helped form the Whig Party in New York. Weed learned the printer’s trade, worked on various upstate New York newspapers, and became a leader in the Anti-Masonic Party (1828). When the Masons forced him out of his management of the Rochester
- Weedkiller’s Daughter, The (work by Arnow)
Harriette Arnow: Arnow’s other novels include The Weedkiller’s Daughter (1970), about an alienated family in a Detroit suburb, and The Kentucky Trace (1974), in which a Revolutionary War soldier seeks his family. In the early 1960s Arnow published two books of social history about the pioneers who settled the Cumberland Plateau…
- Weedon’s Modern Encyclopedia
encyclopaedia: Children’s encyclopaedias: It was based on Weedon’s Modern Encyclopedia, whose copyright had been bought by Britannica. Renamed Britannica Junior Encyclopædia in 1963 (and revised until 1983), it was specifically designed for children in elementary-school grades. One of its features was its ready-reference index volume, which combined short fact entries with indexing…
- Weeds (American television program)
Richard Dreyfuss: …other television shows, among them Weeds, Parenthood, and Your Family or Mine. He portrayed corrupt investment manager Bernie Madoff in the television miniseries Madoff (2016).
- weedy sea dragon (fish)
sea dragon: …or common, sea dragon (Phyllopteryx taeniolatus) has the largest geographic range, which extends from Western Australia to Tasmania and New South Wales. The leafy, or Glauert’s, sea dragon (Phycodurus eques) is found from Western Australia to western Victoria, whereas the ruby sea dragon
- Weegee (American photographer)
Weegee was a photojournalist noted for his gritty yet compassionate images of the aftermath of New York street crimes and disasters. Weegee was born Usher Fellig in Złoczew, Austria-Hungary [now in Zolochiv, Ukraine]. His father, Bernard Fellig, immigrated to the United States in 1906 and was
- Weeghman Park (baseball park, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
Wrigley Field, baseball stadium in Chicago that, since 1916, has been home to the Cubs, the city’s National League (NL) team. Built in 1914, it is one of the oldest and most iconic Major League Baseball parks in the United States. The stadium was designed by brothers Zachary Taylor Davis and
- Weeghman, Charles (American entrepreneur)
Wrigley Field: …Weeghman Park after its owner, Charles Weeghman, and had a seating capacity of 14,000.
- Weehawken (New Jersey, United States)
Weehawken, township, Hudson county, northeastern New Jersey, U.S. It lies 5 miles (8 km) north of Jersey City and opposite New York City on the Hudson River. An industrial port and railroad centre, it is the western portal of the Lincoln Tunnel. It was settled by the Dutch about 1647 when Maryn
- week (chronology)
week, period of seven days, a unit of time artificially devised with no astronomical basis. The week’s origin is generally associated with the ancient Jews and the biblical account of the Creation, according to which God laboured for six days and rested on the seventh. Evidence indicates, however,
- Week in Winter, A (novel by Binchy)
Maeve Binchy: The posthumously published A Week in Winter (2012) chronicles the vicissitudes of an Irish innkeeper and those of her guests.
- Week Of, The (film by Smigel [2018])
Chris Rock: …he appeared in the comedies The Week Of, which also starred Sandler, and Nobody’s Fool. That year the comedy special Chris Rock: Tamborine debuted on Netflix. He then played a 1950s mob boss in season four (2020) of the TV anthology series Fargo. In Spiral (2021), part of the Saw…
- Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, A (autobiographical narrative by Thoreau)
A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, autobiographical narrative by Henry David Thoreau, published in 1849. This Transcendental work is a philosophical treatise couched as a travel adventure. Written mainly during the two years he lived in a cabin on the shores of Walden Pond in Massachusetts
- Weekend (film by Godard [1967])
Jean-Luc Godard: Breathless and filmmaking style and themes: Weekend, also made in 1967, was a hard-hitting denunciation of modern French society.
- Weekend with Claud, A (novel by Bainbridge)
Beryl Bainbridge: In A Weekend with Claud (1967), an experimental novel, the titular hero is a predatory, violent man. Another Part of the Wood (1968) concerns a child’s death resulting from adult neglect. Harriet Said (1972) deals with two teenage girls who seduce a man and murder his…
- Weekend World (British television program)
Peter Mandelson: …a weekly television political program, Weekend World, a vantage point that sharpened his view of Labour’s defects and the party’s need to modernize its politics and appeal. In 1985 Mandelson was appointed Labour’s director of communications by party leader Neil Kinnock. He promoted Kinnock’s modernization agenda and ensured high media…
- Weeki Wachee Spring (spring, Florida, United States)
Weeki Wachee Spring, spring and tourist attraction in Hernando county, west-central Florida, U.S., 55 miles (90 km) north of St. Petersburg. The spring, with a measured depth of more than 250 feet (75 metres), produces a crystal clear water flow of more than 22,460,000 cubic feet (636,000 cubic
- Weekley, Freida (German aristocrat)
D.H. Lawrence: Youth and early career: …in love and eloped with Frieda Weekley (née von Richthofen), the aristocratic German wife of a professor at Nottingham. The couple went first to Germany and then to Italy, where Lawrence completed Sons and Lovers. They were married in England in 1914 after Weekley’s divorce.
- Weekly Illustrated (British magazine)
history of photography: Photojournalism: …where he established the magazines Weekly Illustrated (1934) and Picture Post (1938). Staff photographers on both magazines included old colleagues also forced from Germany, such as Man and Kurt Hutton. They and other contributors were encouraged to develop the technique and pictorial style of taking photographs by using available light—i.e.,…
- Weekly Register (American newspaper)
Hezekiah Niles: …Register (later to be called Niles’ Weekly Register), which he edited and published until 1836 and which became one of the most influential papers in the United States. Niles favoured protective tariffs and the gradual abolition of slavery, and he ceaselessly propagandized for both these causes. Because his articles were…
- Weekly Standard, The (American magazine)
The Weekly Standard, American political opinion magazine founded in 1995 by William Kristol, Fred Barnes, and John Podhoretz with financial backing from Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation. One of the young writers on the staff of the magazine in 1995 was American conservative pundit and popular Fox
- Weekly World News (American newspaper)
National Enquirer: …included a sister tabloid, the Weekly World News (known for even more sensational stories, such as those of alien visitations, and regularly featuring “news updates” of a quasi-human creature named “Bat Boy”). In 1994 the company—which by then included a range of other publications—changed its name to American Media, Inc.…
- Weeknd, The (Canadian singer)
The Weeknd is a Canadian rhythm-and-blues singer and songwriter best known for his explicit songs about sex and drugs, many of which are autobiographical, and for his soaring falsetto and its singular tremolo. Tesfaye’s mother and grandmother immigrated in the 1980s to Canada from Ethiopia, and his
- Weeks, Feast of (Judaism)
Shavuot, (“Festival of the Weeks”), second of the three Pilgrim Festivals of the Jewish religious calendar. It was originally an agricultural festival, marking the beginning of the wheat harvest. During the Temple period, the first fruits of the harvest were brought to the Temple, and two loaves of
- Weelkes, Thomas (English composer)
Thomas Weelkes was an English organist and composer, one of the most important composers of madrigals. Nothing definite is known of Weelkes’s early life, but his later career suggests that he came from southern England. He may have been the Thomas Wikes who was a chorister at Winchester College
- Weems, Carrie Mae (American artist and photographer)
Carrie Mae Weems is an American artist and photographer known for creating installations that combine photography, audio, and text to examine many facets of contemporary American life. A prolific artist, she works in a variety of media and has expanded her practice to include community outreach.
- Weems, Mason Locke (United States minister and writer)
Mason Locke Weems was an American clergyman, itinerant book agent, and fabricator of the story of George Washington’s chopping down the cherry tree. This fiction was inserted into the fifth edition (1806) of Weems’s book The Life and Memorable Actions of George Washington (1800). Weems was ordained
- Weeninx, Jan Baptiste (Dutch painter)
Jan Baptist Weenix was a conventional painter of Italianate landscapes, fanciful seascapes, still lifes with dead game, and portraits. Jan Micker was his first master. He later studied under Abraham Bloemaert in Utrecht and Claes Moeyaert in Amsterdam. In 1643 Weenix travelled to Italy and stayed
- Weenix, Jan Baptist (Dutch painter)
Jan Baptist Weenix was a conventional painter of Italianate landscapes, fanciful seascapes, still lifes with dead game, and portraits. Jan Micker was his first master. He later studied under Abraham Bloemaert in Utrecht and Claes Moeyaert in Amsterdam. In 1643 Weenix travelled to Italy and stayed
- Weep Not, Child (work by Ngugi)
Ngugi wa Thiong’o: His popular Weep Not, Child (1964) was the first major novel in English by an East African. As he became sensitized to the effects of colonialism in Africa, Ngugi adopted his traditional name and wrote in the Bantu language of Kenya’s Kikuyu people.