I worked with the incredible Adam Shankman and his assistant at the time Anne “Momma” Fletcher.
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During one intense episode, Fletcher makes the boy play so hard his hands bleed, covering his drum sticks and set with blood.
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The first, third and fourth are names of plays by Beaumont and Fletcher.
Essays|Ralph Waldo Emerson
Mr. Fletcher was violently impelled against George; to save a fall clutched him.
Once Aboard The Lugger|Arthur Stuart-Menteth Hutchinson
Long afterwards it passed into the hands of a Mr. Fletcher, by whom the existing mansion was erected.
Nooks and Corners of Shropshire|H. Thornhill Timmins
His Beaumont and Fletcher, 1647, which has been lately trotted up to a startling figure by the Americans, cost me 30s.
The Confessions of a Collector|William Carew Hazlitt
Panthea is innocent, but insipid; Mardonius a good specimen of what Fletcher loves to exhibit, the plain honest courtier.
Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. 2|Henry Hallam
British Dictionary definitions for fletcher (1 of 2)
fletcher
/ (ˈflɛtʃə) /
noun
a person who makes arrows
Word Origin for fletcher
C14: from Old French flechier, from fleche arrow; see flèche
British Dictionary definitions for fletcher (2 of 2)
Fletcher
/ (ˈflɛtʃə) /
noun
John . 1579–1625, English Jacobean dramatist, noted for his romantic tragicomedies written in collaboration with Francis Beaumont, esp Philaster (1610) and The Maid's Tragedy (1611)