Look carefully at the pictur...
[2941] Look carefully at the pictur... - Look carefully at the picture and guess the name of the second actor at the scene. - #brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania - Correct Answers: 34 - The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30
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Look carefully at the pictur...

Look carefully at the picture and guess the name of the second actor at the scene.
Correct answers: 34
The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30.
#brainteasers #movie #film #cinemania
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There was once a great actor w...

There was once a great actor who could no longer remember his lines. After several years of searching, he finally finds a theater where they seem prepared to give him a chance to shine again.
The director says, "This is the most important part, and it has only one line. At the opening you walk on stage carrying a rose. You hold the rose to your nose with just one finger and thumb, sniff the rose deeply and then say the line 'Ah, the sweet aroma of my mistress.'"
The actor is thrilled. All day long before the play, he's practicing his line over and over again. Finally, the time comes. The curtain goes up, the actor walks onto the stage, and with great passion delivers the line, "Ah, the sweet aroma of my mistress."
The theater erupts. The audience is screaming with laughter, but the director is steaming!
"Argh! You idiot!" he cries. "You've ruined me!"
The actor is bewildered, "What happened, did I forget my line?"
"No!" screams the director. "You forgot the rose!"
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Edwin G. Boring

Died 1 Jul 1968 at age 81 (born 23 Oct 1886). Edwin Garrigues Boring was an American psychologist who was first recognized for his experimental work but later known as a historian of psychology. When the U.S. entered WW I, Robert M. Yerkes recruited Boring to help test the intelligence of draftees. In 1922, he was invited to Harvard, where he began a long and productive career as director of the psychological laboratory (1924-49). To free psychology from its status as part of the Dept. of Philosophy, Boring succeeded in establishing a separate Dept of Psychology (1934). Upon retirement, he was appointed Edgar Pierce Professor Emeritus and continued to teach classes until he was nearly 71. Throughout his life, he wrote textbooks and edited professional journals.
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