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"ingénue" Definitions
  1. an innocent young woman, especially in a film or play

191 Sentences With "ingénue"

How to use ingénue in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ingénue" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ingénue". Mastering all the usages of "ingénue" from sentence examples published by news publications.

We now understand what prompted those initial distracting details, like, for instance, the pauses the male ingénue (Kazuaki Nagaya) takes in the middle of trying to bite the female ingénue (Yuzuki Akiyama), or why said ingénue, who happens to be the designated final girl, screams so relentlessly and so unconvincingly.
A residential building is an ingénue for maybe three years.
I'm 43, not some ingénue who just stumbled into this.
How do you feel like Lola transcends the ingénue role?
When I was an ingénue, I never sounded like one.
Still, I feel no need to engage in ingénue mourning.
Mom is the fresh bloom, the ingénue and prize in marriage.
It's the rare ingénue who gets to play the newbie role twice.
So: The ingénue police are knocking, but I'm not letting them in.
Beguiling as an excitable ingénue, she becomes cipherlike as the book progresses.
A line every ingénue in every bad romantic comedy is forced to utter.
Emma Stone is a bubbly ingénue, and Dwayne Johnson a relatable beach bodybuilder.
Is the ingénue a good writer, or is she just a good character?
To begin with, Eliza is one of the great parts for an ingénue.
Feeling like you're being replaced by a sweeter, fresh-faced ingénue is no picnic.
Where has the fabulous Scarlett Strallen, who plays the ingénue, Mabel, been hiding herself?
Even the ingénue (Brittany Bradford) quite happily experiments with full-on Hamlet-Ophelia frottage.
" She typed "Ingénue" on fax paper, "which was all I had for some reason.
Some readers imagined her as an innocent ingénue; others found her writing subversively erotic.
He really meant, I think, that you've grown up into a full-fledged ingénue.
Spunky ingénue Mia Dolan is in town with a solo show of her own.
But I did not expect Hollywood's favorite ingénue to imbibe in the intoxicating reality show.
A hot ingénue with a big smile and a tiny waist: I was killing it.
Mearns isn't my idea of an ingénue—Shaw is—but they are both wonderful. ♦
Yet tween girls will swoon for Mr. Galitzine's broody cheekbones and Ms. Kampa's ingénue sweetness.
WE'RE BETTER AT BEGINNINGS: the debut author, the ingénue, the voice of a new generation.
"I am rarely cast as an ingénue anymore," Lois Smith was saying on Monday afternoon.
There's Singin' in the Rain, Reynolds's ingénue debut, and her 1957 hit Tammy and the Bachelor.
What plot there is involves a society ingénue (Melody Jane) who finds her privileged life boring.
I had spent about $2,000 to learn that an ingénue role is difficult to un-lovely.
Some people posted novellas describing the imagined life of a wealthy Beijing ingénue looking for adventure.
" She also singles out Lady Gaga's performance as the ingénue Ally, describing her as "touchingly vulnerable.
But Ferris has thick blond hair, high cheek bones and the vivacity of a stereotypical ingénue.
In "Artemisia", a film released in 1997, Gentileschi is a headstrong young ingénue who falls for her teacher.
Two notoriously exacting talents—the ingénue, the wunderkind—seized on each other's velocity at precisely the right moment.
So many ads portray women as the naïve ingénue, the sex magnet, and I wanted none of that.
It fits the narrative of the ingénue with stars in her eyes making her way in the big city.
"I never looked like an ingénue," Ms. Grimes acknowledged in a 21989 interview with The New York Times Magazine.
"When I was young, I stared at that 'Ingénue' record cover in awe," Ms. Veirs said the other day.
According to Miller, Landon was a complex amalgam of ingénue and siren, a limpid lyricist and a canny negotiator.
It's hard to find an ingénue — to use a term long past its sell-by date — in the bunch.
Streep, on the other hand, was an ingénue who'd made her bones on the Broadway stage before jumping to films.
Alexia is the glittering-eyed, amoral big sister from hell: Justine is the young ingénue who chafes against her dominance.
She was part of Dylan's Revue, too, and shows up in the documentary as the Ingénue — and so it goes.
Another actress might have settled there, staking out a comfortable living filling in one shade of disarming ingénue or another.
Ms. Perry joined her uncle's traveling troupe as a teenage ingénue, then left to become a stage star in 1905.
Lee, whose birth name is Elizabeth Lear, is an unstable actress in Hollywood who has aged out of ingénue roles.
She runs classes more in the manner of a zany Gracie Allen-type ingénue than some New Age guru affectation.
Charles chose an aristocratic ingénue as his bride because duty demanded it and he'd been trained to submit to that.
"I wouldn't want to get the Laurie Anderson Prize," she said, flattening her voice to that of an extraterrestrial ingénue.
A glint of steel was already apparent in her first appearance as a convent-bound ingénue simmering with suppressed passion.
Jepsen went from edgy to ingénue after a single session with the scissors — and, we imagine, a couple rounds of bleach.
A woman in lingerie sets fire to the tiers of her pronged headgear before igniting another ingénue in diamante nipple tassles.
Some political analysts believe the 40-year political veteran could be drawn to a statesmanlike-role to mentor political ingénue Ardern.
She is in a tree when Woody, her unmarried and prospective male-ingénue beau — another casting conundrum — enters in Act 1.
" An agent attended the performance because one of his clients wanted him to see a woman Jimenez describes as an "ingénue.
Nervy, complex and richly shaded, Ms. Agresta's timbre was far removed from the limpid ingénue voices typically cast for this part.
LOVE LETTERS In "The Favourite," the actor's deft portrayal of a wily ingénue took the author Durga Chew-Bose by surprise.
Producers decide to nix Reina (also played by Adina Verson), who plays the lesbian ingénue Rifkele, because she cannot speak proper English.
Ms. O'Connell said she has never fit the ingénue mold, and struggled to find solid footing in the New York theater world.
Her 1976 remake of A Star Is Born casts her as Esther Hoffman, the ingénue to Kris Kristofferson's self-destructive rock god.
Ms. Lang's label, Nonesuch Records, has issued a remastered version of "Ingénue" with bonus tracks taken from her 21992 "MTV Unplugged" appearance.
It echoed "S1m0ne," a 2002 film starring Al Pacino as a film director who replaces an uncooperative actress with a digital ingénue.
Wide-eyed and radiant, she looked like an ingénue, but in truth had been honing her craft and overcoming rejection for years.
She "arrived" in 1952 in Stanley Donen's "Singin' in the Rain," playing what she was at the time: a minty-fresh ingénue.
Maria, played by Shereen Pimentel, is not an ingénue — she's willful and is often leading Tony rather than the other way around.
Mr. Cash played the juvenile lead, always united with the ingénue after plot complications had been unraveled by Toby, a comic trickster.
Publishing loves a literary ingénue, as if no one over the age of 40 or 50 or 60 has anything worthwhile to say.
Every good love story has a moment in which the precious ingénue, blind to the complexities of the world, misinterprets the lover's move.
Swift had defied the normal ingénue-to-sex-temptress career trajectory of Britney Spears and Miley Cyrus, but now she's fitting right in.
We know her as the red-headed — sometimes blonde — witty ingénue, but in Battle of the Sexes, which premieres in September, Stone looks unrecognizable.
Lorde, the New Zealander ingénue whose song "Royals" was the undeniable earworm of 2013, hasn't released a new album since Pure Heroine's runaway success.
Unfortunately, roles for younger women tend to fit the ingénue archetype — they're young, wide-eyed characters that lack agency in their own lives, Dunst explained.
" As she moved from child star to young Hollywood ingénue, she was cast on Melrose Place, and later starred on the CW cult classic, "Charmed.
Petite, with a delicately tapering face, she can play the ingénue, the diva, or the girl next door, and costume changes come at dizzying speed.
Go long with velvet tasseled one for a '70s psychedelic moment or tie a thin one in a bow for a New Wave ingénue vibe.
In the late 1970s, Albertine played guitar for the Slits with a Vivienne Westwood-inspired blond ingénue look, sex kitten by way of Renaissance cherub.
Eternal ingénue Melissa Errico stars as the hypnosis-seeking Daisy with Stephen Bogardus as the doctor who prefers her past life to her present one.
Their voices didn't much darken or deepen in their 40s, leaving them basically stranded in the ingénue roles they'd been singing since they were young.
A day later, her mother, _________ , the wholesome ingénue in 1950s films like "Singin' in the Rain" and "Tammy and the Bachelor," died following a stroke.
A spiked Shirley Temple of a show, "Ruthless!" opened 23 years ago with the likes of Natalie Portman and Britney Spears playing its occasionally homicidal ingénue.
She plays Jenny Mellor, a sprightly 16-year-old ingénue who starts dating an older man at Oxford University, much to the chagrin of her teachers.
Weems appears in flowing black, a specter of the black ingénue who arrived too early, who was ignored, who never even had the chance to be.
Over the decades, Ms. Cook changed from a Broadway ingénue into a kind of sybil pouring out compassion gleaned from her own personal ups and downs.
In the first act, we meet a bride, Irene (Holley Fain, an ingénue with an edge), and groom, Martin (Michael Crane), on their disastrous wedding night.
As Zerlina, the Russian soprano Aida Garifullina made her house debut with an interestingly copper-hued, stiletto-sharp voice that didn't quite fit this ingénue role.
After she died following a stroke on Wednesday at the age of 84, the New York Times called her a "wholesome ingénue" in its obituary headline.
She should be the musical's lightning rod, the wide-eyed ingénue whose blossoming sexuality as viewed through the Transylvanians' eyes defines the trajectory of half the show.
As a 803-year-old starlet in Hollywood in 1949, the ingénue was distressed to see the name Nancy Davis on a list of suspected Communist sympathizers.
Moments after recounting that conversation to a postscreening crowd at the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, he welcomed his ingénue, the former model Agyness Deyn.
The title track from Ariana Grande's new album, "Dangerous Woman," posits Ms. Grande, not that long ago an ingénue, as an avatar of sexual strength and control.
She was 28, a brunet ingénue from English stock, raised in what she has wryly called "the most aristocratic village in the prune belt" of Northern California.
Sure Ms. McDormand's fellow nominee, Ms. Ronan, is 23, but she plays a pretty tough customer in "Lady Bird," and also has never been considered an ingénue.
She is no sylph, no ingénue, yet there she is in nothing but a pair of purple underpants, exulting in her physicality as an audience looks on.
Recounting his arrival at the State Department early in the Obama administration, Farrow offers himself as the ingénue, poised for an education in the ways of Washington.
Andriana Chuchman has a tidy soprano that truly shines in its high notes, but Valencienne, the ingénue, needs, well, not perkiness, exactly, but more acuteness and vibrancy.
"Lélia" uses twin sisters with different outlooks to probe the meaning of freedom; "Isidora", republished earlier this year, tells the tale of a woman both ingénue and whore.
Taylor, she's all about the kids and the ingénue, and you can see that because her imagery is all about being in groups and frolicking for the camera.
The 30-year-old ingénue of "No Tomorrow" is Evie (Tori Anderson), an overly organized, mostly cheerful sort with a soul-killing job at an Amazon-like retailer.
At the time designer front rows were judiciously seeded with "friends of the house," among them society figures, and the occasional television personality, Broadway ingénue or authentic megastar.
In the experiment, a primitive (by today's standards) chatbot that Weizenbaum named ELIZA —for the George Bernard Shaw ingénue—responded, in writing, to statements by the study's subjects.
After Grande did double duty on SNL earlier this year, both hosting and performing, Steven Spielberg texted Lorne Michaels to tell him how impressed he was with the ingénue.
Lansbury was 19 when she married Richard Cromwell, an actor who was more than a decade older than the ingénue and who had had an affair with Howard Hughes.
A low-brow comedy ingénue who skyrocketed to blockbuster success with a string of formulaic family comedies, Sandler's brand eventually turned self-cannibalistic, tedious, and infuriating—yet, remained profitable.
Still, Pattinson hadn't quite figured out his character until he saw hair-and-makeup photos of his co-star Lily-Rose Depp, who was cast as a royal ingénue.
Debuting in the role of the ingénue, Ms. Markle actively repositioned Rachel out of the eye-candy slot, and by the end, her character had become the show's moral conscience.
The star of the dance musical, Burt Gurney (Channing Tatum, tap-dancing and grinning like a maniac) appears to be an all-American male ingénue, but has a secret agenda.
Sharon Tate, the tragic ingénue who epitomized the breezy Hollywood style of the late 503s, has been gone for nearly five decades, but these days she seems anything but dead.
"Suspiria" begins largely as it did in 1977, with the arrival of American ingénue Susie Bannion (Dakota Johnson) at the prestigious Helena Markos Dance Company in drab, drizzly West Berlin.
Like Garland, she was a young star who struggled to find meaningful parts after years of ingénue roles, and whose appearance has been the subject of intense scrutiny and gossip.
Elsewhere, it was also associated with the Nouvelle Vague movement in France, with ingénue actresses Jean Seberg and Anna Karina sporting theirs with feline-flicked eyeliner and a cigarette in-hand.
The last time England sent an ingénue — Blackburn Rovers, in 1995 — the result was embarrassment, and immediate elimination, from a group with Spartak Moscow, Legia Warsaw and the Norwegian club Rosenborg.
"Pippa and I worked really hard to make sure Natasha was as interesting as possible — to get out of the box a female ingénue often gets trapped in," Ms. Chavkin said.
The three central women, all military wives, are immediately identifiable as the den mother, the ingénue (she burns the toast and screams at the sight of a scorpion) and the tramp.
Livingston's subjects are eclectic, from the delicate ingénue Venus Xtravaganza to the wizened veteran Dorian Corey, but they all seem to take at least some comfort in their own theatrical self-mythology.
That folks would accept a tall, ethereal blond as the lead ingénue of a summer action movie over an equally lovely but paler, shorter brunette, even though she originated the goddamned character?
Not because I was an Oscar-nominated ingénue about to walk the red carpet in Valentino couture and Bulgari earrings, but because my mom's red carpet commentary was the stuff of legend.
"So often I felt like I was giving up a part of myself in order to play this ingénue — either dumbing myself down, or making myself more frightened or scared," she said.
When we meet our main characters, Alison is an aspiring actress in New York City, where she endures the usual ingénue miseries, including dead-end auditions, annoying roommates and a dwindling bank account.
If her mother was forever an ingénue, albeit one who could land a wicked zinger, Ms. Fisher was a blazing comic, a teller of truths with little patience for costume and cover-up.
The sweet first kiss moment with Court (Jason London) is proof the actress is just as apt at playing the ingénue as she is suited for the meatier roles she took on years later.
She made five films in three years with luminaries like Lana Turner and Fred Astaire — but it was her sixth that turned Reynolds from just another ingénue into America's Sweetheart: Singin' in the Rain.
In the original production, life imitated art, or at least showbiz, in the case of Bernadette Peters, then unknown, who replaced another actor and pealed her way to stardom as the show's ingénue, Ruby.
"It was really difficult for me to try to figure out how to get out of being an ingénue or the 'other woman' because it was never anything that I had intended," she said.
When "Ingénue" was released in 22016, with its dirge-like anthems to love and longing, the idea that a thrillingly sexual, openly gay and very butch woman would become a pop idol was seismic.
Yet there's Laura Linney, fresh and funny as ever, once again reprising the role of Mary Ann, the Midwestern ingénue who's forever arriving in the city by the bay and having her life changed.
Fans first came to know her as an ingénue who dated shock rocker Marilyn Manson and wore a see-through dress when accompanying him on the red carpet of the 1998 MTV Video Music Awards.
If Panarea, the smallest island in the archipelago, is the fun little ingénue of the Aeolian Islands, Lipari — which means "large, fertile" — is her big, slightly worn grandmother: She's definitely seen a thing or two.
Women like Veronica and Vonnie are treated like trophies, and there's a burgeoning sense that if they don't fulfill their duties as prizes, there's another ingénue on the fringes who's ready to get into the game.
But Katharina Lorenz, who plays Salomé as a young woman, makes her seem like a starry-eyed ingénue who utters proto-feminist platitudes with the peppiness of a Disney heroine, or a belle-époque Lena Dunham.
Ewan McGregor is "at his ingénue best," Manohla Dargis wrote in The New York Times, portraying a scribe for hire in this moody tale from Roman Polanski, set in one of the best beach houses ever.
Not given to prolonged mourning, she turned to a lavishly pleated, ankle-grazing green velvet dress, plucked it off the rack, clutched it to her chest and gave it the girlish twirl of a 1950s ingénue.
At the time, she was cast as an ingénue in Woody Allen's stage adaptation of "Bullets Over Broadway" and at the sitzprobe she was so deep into her work that she had scarcely noticed the musicians.
In it, the ingénue (Felicity Kendal) falls in love with a wealthy playboy (Shashi Kapoor, the real-life husband of her sister, Jennifer Kendal), who was already, and inconveniently, romancing a Bollywood film star (Madhur Jaffrey).
Diana, one of the most photographed women in the world, whose every fashion choice was scrutinized by millions, evolved from girlish ingénue to glamorous international star — powered in no small part by her choice of dress.
A Star is Born — a big-screen story made and remade in 1937, 1954, and 1976 — follows a talented ingénue (Gaga) and her foray into big-time show business with all its promise and its peril.
A coloratura soprano who personified the pert appeal of a 1950s ingénue, she appeared on Broadway in only a handful of shows, but twice she followed Miss Martin in a Tony-winning musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein.
At least Victoria Mack efficiently sketches the dancing girl Muriel O'Neill, then the wide-eyed ingénue Miss Clarabelle Cobb; John Plumpis also brings just the right amount of urbane menace to the well-heeled racketeer Heine Schmitz.
But the entire cast — which also notably includes a heartfelt Lindsay Roberts in the ingénue role of Cindy Lou — is first-rate, and each member creates a specifically defined individual whom you somehow feel you've met before.
A few things about the 2018 reboot are objectively better: Ally and Jackson have depth and complex backstories, whereas the leads in a lot of the old versions feel like archetypes—the hapless drunk; the naïve ingénue.
An instrumental figure in this period was the composer and arranger Wally Harper, who over 30 years, beginning in 1974, helped her reinvent herself from a soprano ingénue into a sophisticated cabaret and concert artist who could swing.
Mia Farrow's deceptive performance as the ingénue with a resolve (and a womb) of steel is endlessly captivating, and John Cassavetes remains the smarmiest villain in the universe in his eagerness to sell his wife's uterus to Satan.
What counts is the Looney Tunes conviction with which these performers invest their roles, from Mr. Van Swearingen's festering sad sack to Ms. Girten's overage, teetotaling ingénue, who winds up flirting disconnectedly with Mr. Judd's temporarily reformed rake.
SUSPIRIA The ingénue is Dakota Johnson rather than Jessica Harper; the score is by the Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke instead of Goblin; and the visual stylishness comes courtesy of the director Luca Guadagnino ("Call Me by Your Name").
These are all friends, people that she's worked with or known through the community, and she pretends, she puts on an act, and pretends to be an ingénue and starry-eyed and just learning her way around the theater.
Groomed as a member of the Nickelodeon stable of stars, her role as aspiring singer-actress Cat Valentine on the kids show "Victorious" helped pave the way for her music career and her role as the quintessential pop ingénue.
Given the high school setting, the ingénue cast and some show tunes, you're forgiven for thinking that "Rise" sounds a lot like "Glee," the Ryan Murphy glitterbomb about a show choir that ran on Fox from 2009 to 2015.
But since Ms. Errico recently wrote an essay for The New York Times in which she wondered if she'd passed her sell-by date as an ingénue, it is she who has placed that particular elephant in the room.
And while she is several decades older than the young Carol Burnett was when she originated Winnifred on Broadway 50-some years ago, the diminutive Ms. Hoffman proves to be every inch — and decibel — the ingénue she needs to be.
She is portrayed by a superficially severe Sierra Boggess, the star of "Disney's The Little Mermaid" and Mr. Lloyd Webber's ill-fated "Phantom" sequel, "Love Never Dies," who seems very happy not to have to embody yet another cardboard ingénue.
The rapper finally released his much-anticipated album The Life Of Pablo, made waves in the fashion world with two controversial shows, and ostensibly forever changed the wide-eyed ingénue image of Taylor Swift after proving that she lied on him.
Florence Henderson, who began her career as an ingénue soprano in stage musicals in the 1950s but made a more lasting impression on television as the perky 1970s sitcom mom on "The Brady Bunch," died on Thursday in Los Angeles.
Danielle Darrieux, the French actress and singer whose career of sophisticated film roles spanned eight decades and indelible incarnations as ingénue, coquette, femme fatale and grande dame, died on Tuesday at her home in Bois-le-Roi, France, south of Paris.
The film may have been a quaint display of American decency and small-town folksiness — with his ingénue bright face, John Dall as Bart fits this idea to a T — were it not for the electrifying and darker, more complex presence of Cummins.
Lawrence wrote the ingénue playbook for the decade because she had an endless stream of stories that reinforced the larger narrative she was building: that she was a relatable, goofy spaz who just happened to also be a beautiful and talented movie star.
"The roles for girls in their early 20s are the manic pixie dream girl or the ingénue, or the bubbly girlfriend, and I was just in a place where that didn't resonate with me or what I liked about films," she said.
British editors often seem to hire writers, editors, artists, and photographers with an eye to character and quirk, as if casting an opera buffa: there's the prince, the ingénue, the intellectual, the dame, the dandy, the wit, and the sharp-shooting kid.
She gets the band back together from her old show, "FYI": Frank Fontana (Joe Regalbuto), the investigative reporter; Corky Sherwood (Faith Ford, her timing sharp as ever), a former ingénue now facing age discrimination herself; and the perennially frazzled Miles Silverberg (Grant Shaud).
Without its ingénue, the show widens its lens, becoming truly communal, a portrait of a utopian subworld of aging nuns and single women, boarding together and sharing meals, their lives devoted to easing the conditions of a poverty-ridden London neighborhood called Poplar.
"I like the idea of Wendy, the traditional ingénue role, being played by somebody who has more teeth than the kind of person who's usually asked to play that role," said Mx. Markey, who took on Lynette Fromme in Stephen Sondheim's "Assassins" last summer.
So even though Bette Midler looked like a model of adult chic in silver sequined Michael Kors, and Denée Benton was rightfully christened "most fashionable ingénue" by Vogue in green strapless Oscar de la Renta, glittering leaves tumbling down her long white skirt, E!
In the videos, where she appears in an early '10s teen-girl uniform — crimson hair, cat-eye makeup, beaded ring bracelet — the look on her face is impossibly world-weary: more veteran hauled out of retirement than ingénue in search of her close-up.
Margot Robbie's nomination cements her graduation from the ingénue holding pen, not that really she needed it; she is starring as Elizabeth I in the forthcoming "Mary Queen of Scots," across from her fellow best actress nominee, Saoirse Ronan, who, at 23, is already considered a great.
The ingénue in the yellow dress will vanish from the story, which is concerned with the entwined romantic and creative doings of an actress named Mia (who is behind the wheel of a Prius) and a jazz pianist named Sebastian (who is pushing a shiny crimson beater).
It is where young men turned to learn to mix a French 75, tie a full Windsor knot, ogle (in purely aesthetic terms, of course) the latest lingerie-clad Hollywood ingénue and absorb life lessons from stoical, stubble-face cover subjects like Clint Eastwood and Bradley Cooper.
The degradations lie in the jewelry and stains she clears from his couch cushions, in the blank checks she types and in the nervously chatting ingénue she transports to a nearby hotel: The spoor of the workplace predator is wearyingly familiar and as ubiquitous as offices themselves.
Even Monday at the Met Gala, which is known for bolder fashions and hairstyles than Hollywood awards shows, you could have bet your blow dryer there would be an ingénue with "effortless" beach waves or a more "serious" actress going for the shock of an impenetrably sleek blowout.
But Kristen Stewart racked up the French equivalent of an Academy Award for her portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging French movie star played by Juliette Binoche — achieved stardom: an ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
The snug fit was restricting his movements, and he would probably need to lift his arms dramatically at some point while portraying an orphaned ingénue who becomes a sultry nightclub entertainer, loses her daughter while locked up in jail, then rebounds as the head of a bordello empire.
Over the 11 years in which they were released, Ms Bush developed from a teenage ingénue exploring the edges of the singer-songwriter style into an artist who seemed to have devised her own musical language, exploiting new sampling and editing technology while delving back into traditional music for her sources.
Natasha may be "young" at the show's opening, but by the time she's screwed up not one but two romantic relationships, she's an ingénue no longer, and she, too, has to deal with what it means to be a complicated, flawed, human being, living in the world without easy answers.
A lyric soprano with a voice as flexible as it is rich, she is also a fine actress whose instinctive feel for the Gilbert and Sullivan ingénue idiom — play it straight with just a sly wink peeking out from the batting eyelashes — makes her every scene and song a joy.
But far from a local ingénue thriving on pure luck, Mr. Jones, his friends and colleagues say, spent years preparing to make a leap into elective office, building a web of relationships beyond his deep-red state that helped sustain a seemingly long-shot candidacy through its lean early months.
On Twitter: Laura Benanti, who happens to be a fantastically lovely soprano ingénue onstage who is hilarious dark as a writer and, I choose to assume, as a person, and Laurie Kilmartin, who writes for Conan O'Brien and who was supernice to me before anyone wanted to give me a job.
And so, he said, while members of his social circle are "horrified" at the prospect of a Trump presidency, they admire a bit of the bootstraps American story: that Mr. Trump, a political ingénue, or Senator Bernie Sanders, the unsuccessful Democratic contender, could surge from nowhere for a shot at the presidency.
Encounters That 68-year-old Broadway ingénue, Bruce Springsteen, was nowhere to be seen at the Hard Rock Cafe in Times Square on Thursday night, having briefly slipped in and out of the after-party being held to celebrate the opening of his show at the Walter Kerr Theater a few hours earlier.
Kristen Stewart became the first American actress to win a César Award, the French equivalent of an Oscar, for her portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging movie star played by Juliette Binoche — achieved fame: an ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
From "The Grifters" to "20th Century Women," Ms. Bening's women typically cannot be bound by the roles society expects them to play, just as Ms. Bening, 191, has outgrown the conventional roles of the screen actress: whether the sexy ingénue, the romantic lead, the classy prestige star or, in recent years, the movie mother.
In Tarantino's alternate reality, Rick lives in Benedict Canyon on Cielo Drive, next door to Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), a real-life ingénue who was eight and a half months pregnant and wed to the Polish director Roman Polanski when she was brutally murdered along with other houseguests by members of the cult led by Charles Manson.
Kristen Stewart racked up a supporting-actress prize from the New York Film Critics Circle and the French equivalent of an Oscar for her portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging movie star played by Juliette Binoche — achieved stardom: an ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
An architect, Sasha Gébler was recently in an East London member's club that he designed, recalling the day in the mid-sixties when his father—a "desperate, driven" man who mistakenly "thought he'd married an ingénue"—asked him and his older brother to write something down, for a judge's eyes, about their preferred future living arrangements.
Whether Ms. Stone really bested her fellow Oscar contenders Meryl Streep, Ruth Negga, Natalie Portman and Isabelle Huppert is a matter of opinion, but other factors work in her favor: She largely carried an enormously popular film, she's an ingénue in Hollywood's eyes, she's well liked by the academy, and she has been nominated for an Oscar before.
Kristen Stewart racked up a supporting-actress prize from the New York Film Critics Circle and the French equivalent of an Oscar for her portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging movie star played by Juliette Binoche — achieved stardom: An ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
But Kristen Stewart racked up a supporting actress prize from the New York Film Critics Circle and a César Award, the French equivalent of an Academy Award, for this portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging French movie star, played by Juliette Binoche — achieved stardom: an ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
I think one of the reasons she's endured in such diverse material (in addition to playing the nasty mother in the Showtime series "The Affair" for three seasons, she has appeared, in recent years, in such plays as David Grimm's "Tales from Red Vienna" and Beth Henley's "Family Week") is that she didn't have to transition from ingénue parts to mature roles.
But Kristen Stewart racked up a supporting actress prize from the New York Film Critics Circle and the French equivalent of an Academy Award for her portrayal of a personal assistant who unwittingly mimics the role for which her boss — an aging French movie star played by Juliette Binoche — achieved stardom: an ingénue catastrophically involved with a lovesick older woman.
If at the start of her storied career Ms. Franklin pliantly allowed herself to be groomed and promoted as a gospel ingénue with a set of pipes capable of blowing off the church doors, it was not long into her ascent that she began marshaling the power her nascent stardom commanded to extend the parameters of how we understood and defined black beauty.
When I was offered the chance to perk up my curly curls and scrub up my Irish brogue to portray the fairylike Sharon McLonergan in a coming Off Broadway revival of the musical "Finian's Rainbow," this version of the actor's dream crept into my subconscious and made plain thoughts I was already thinking: At age 46, when does an ingénue hang up her ponytail?
There's a sense of uncanny intimacy when you see something of yourself in a designer's work, and Piccioli has set out to deepen that relationship between designer and wearer by following the philosophy that a truly contemporary definition of beauty is expansive enough to appeal to both rap stars and princesses, an ingénue at a premiere and a mother marking the occasion of her daughter's bat mitzvah.
Meanwhile, Shannen Doherty—on "Beverly Hills, 90210," she transformed the Midwestern-ingénue role of Brenda Walsh into a morally ambiguous spitfire by applying bitch face to every line—drifts into view as a globe-trotting do-gooder who is nearly impossible to sign to the show, maybe because, like her offscreen version, she is unwilling to be cast as the villain that she was portrayed as during her tabloid days.
The episodes don't try to compete with what Mr. Zicherman calls the "food porn" of reality TV. But since taste is central to Tess's awakening, the camera lingers seductively on an oyster or a glass of wine and then shows how that bite or that sip affects Tess, played here by Ella Purnell, an expressive British ingénue with the eyes-to-face ratio usually found in a giant squid and a seeming ability to soak up the whole world.

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