Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine, who rose to fame during Hollywood's golden age as the star of several Alfred Hitch.cock classics, died from natural causes at her home in Carmel, northern California on December 16, 2013 aged 96, US media reports said.
Born in Japan to British parents, Fontaine moved in 1919 to California, where she and her elder sister -screen idol Olivia de Havilland-were to shape successful movie careers.Fontaine and de Havilland remain the only sisters to have won lead actress honours at the Academy Awards.Yet the two sisters also had an uneasy relationship, with Fontaine recording a bitter competition in her own account "No Bed of Roses ".
Fontaine began her acting career in her late teens with Largely less important roles on the stage and later in mostly B-movies in the 1930s. It was not before famous British film director Hitchcock spotted her a decade later that her career took off.
Greatly surprised by her expressive looks, the suspense (悬念) master cast Fontaine in his first US film, a 1940 adaptation of the Daphne du Maurier novel "Rebecca". She received an Academy Award nomination(提名) for her performance as a troubled wife. A year later, Fontaine finally won the long-sought golden figure, for her role as leading lady in "Suspicion" opposite Cary Grant, becoming the first and only actress to earn the title for a Hitchock film.
Although her sister, Olivia de Havilland, preceded her in gaining Hollywood fame, Fontaine was the first of the sisters to win an Oscar, beating Olivia's nomination as best actress in Mitchell Leisen's "Hold Back the Dawn".
The dislike ,between the sisters was felt at the Oscars ceremony."I froze. I stared across the table, where Olivia was sitting.'Get up there!' she whispered commandingly," Fontaine said."All the dislike we'd felt toward each other as children…all came rushing back in quickly changing pictures…I felt Olivia would spring across the table and seize me by the hair."
Olivia did not win her first Oscar until 1946, for her role as the lover of a World War I pilot in Leisen's " To Each His Own". Fontaine later made it known that her. sister had slighted her as she attempted to offer congratulations.“She took one look at me, ignored my hand, seized her Oscar and wheeled away,” she said.
The sisters were also reportedly competitors in love. Howard Hughes, a strange businessman who dated the elder de Havilland for a time, offered marriage to Fontaine several times."I married first, won the Oscar before Olivia did, and if I die first, she'll undoubtedly be extremely angry because I beat her to it!" Fontaine once joked.
As her film career fruited in the 1950s, Fontaine turned to television and dinner theatre, and also appeared in several Broadway productions, including the Lion in Winter". Anything but the ordinary lady, Fontaine was also a licensed pilot, a champion balloonist, an accomplished golfer, a licensed .decoration designer and a first-class cook.
【小题1】When she moved to California, Joan Fontaine was years old.
| A.two | B.twelve | C.twenty | D.twenty -two |
| A.1930s | B.1940s | C.1950s | D.1960s |
| A.Rebecca ' | B.Suspicion |
| C.To Each His Own | D.Hold Back the Dawn |
| A.Olivia preceded Fontaine in getting married. |
| B.Olivia gamed Hollywood fame after Fontaine. |
| C.Fontaine won an Oscar before her sister Olivia, |
| D.Fontaine wanted to meet her death before Olivia. |
| A.competed for an Oscar | B.competed for a husband |
| C.were small children | D.were successful actresses |
| A.disliked by her family | B.always a troubled wife |
| C.able to do few jobs | D.gifted in many ways |
【小题1】A
【小题2】B
【小题3】B
【小题4】C
【小题5】C
【小题6】D
解析试题分析:文章介绍奥斯卡最佳女演员Joan Fontaine的生平事迹,她的成就,以及她和姐姐之间的爱恨情仇。
【小题1】细节题:从文章第一段的句子:died from natural causes at her home in Carmel, northern California on December 16, 2013 aged 96,可知Joan Fontaine是在1917年出生,而第二段的句子Born in Japan to British parents, Fontaine moved in 1919 to California,可知当搬到加力福利亚的时候,Joan Fontaine2岁,选 A
【小题2】细节题:从文章第四段的句子:可知Joan Fontaine在20世纪40年代才成功或受欢迎,选 B
【小题3】细节题:从文章第四段的句子:Born in Japan to British parents, Fontaine moved in 1919 to California,可知Joan Fontaine 因为在Suspicion里面的角色获得奥斯卡奖,选 B
【小题4】细节题:从文章第五段的句子:Although her sister, Olivia de Havilland, preceded her in gaining Hollywood fame, Fontaine was the first of the sisters to win an Oscar,可知Fontaine在姐姐 Olivia前获得奥斯卡奖,选C。
【小题5】细节题:从文章第六段的句子:The dislike ,between the sisters was felt at the Oscars ceremony."I froze. I stared across the table, where Olivia was sitting.'Get up there!' she whispered commandingly," Fontaine said."All the dislike we'd felt toward each other as children…可知Fontaine和Olivia之间不喜欢是从她们是孩子的时候。选C
【小题6】细节题:从文章最后一段的句子:Anything but the ordinary lady, Fontaine was also a licensed pilot, a champion balloonist, an accomplished golfer, a licensed .decoration designer and a first-class cook.可知Joan Fontaine是在很多方面都是有天赋的人,选 D
考点:考查人物传记类短文
科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
It was a winter morning, just a couple of weeks before Christmas 2005. While most people were warming up their cars, Trevor, my husband, had to get up early to ride his bike four kilometers away from home to work. On arrival, he parked his bike outside the back door as he usually does. After putting in 10 hours of labor, he returned to find his bike gone.
The bike, a black Kona 18 speed, was our only transport. Trevor used it to get to work, putting in 60-hour weeks to support his young family. And the bike was also used to get groceries(食品杂货),saving us from having to walk long distances from where we live.
I was so sad that someone would steal our bike that I wrote to the newspaper and told them our story. Shortly after that, several people in our area offered to help. One wonderful stranger even bought a bike, then called my husband to pick it up. Once again my husband had a way to get to and from his job. It really is an honor that a complete stranger would go out of their way for someone they have never met before.
People say that a smile can be passed from one person to another, but acts of kindness from strangers are even more so. This experience has had a spreading effect in our lives because it strengthened our faith in humanity(人性)as a whole. And it has influenced us to be more mindful of ways we, too, can share with others. No matter how big or how small, an act of kindness shows that someone cares. And the results can be everlasting.
【小题1】Why was the bike so important to the couple?
| A.The man’s job was bike racing. |
| B.It was their only possession. |
| C.It was a nice Kona 18 speed. |
| D.They used it for work and daily life. |
| A.the couple worked 60 hours a week. |
| B.people were busy before Christmas |
| C.the stranger brought over the bike |
| D.life was hard for the young family. |
| A.From radio broadcasts. | B.From a newspaper. |
| C.From TV news. | D.From a stranger. |
| A.Strangers are usually of little help. |
| B.One should take care of their bike. |
| C.News reports make people famous. |
| D.An act of kindness can mean a lot. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
I’ve often wondered if I might do more good as a travel agent rather than as a psychologist. It seems that I have been more dramatically affected by certain kinds of travel experiences than I ever have.
My trip to Iceland is a fine example of that. The plan was to spend two days in a remote mountain hut in Iceland. I was working on a photographic book about winter in Iceland and needed to capture images of this amazing region of high mountain peaks, smoky volcanoes, and lakes with floating icebergs.
The moment after we arrived, the weather turned extreme making visibility impossible. It snowed so much and the wind blew so hard that we couldn’t leave the tiny hut. To stay warm, we walked around in circles much of the day inside the tiny hut. We tried to call for help but the radio did not work. Day after day, we watched our supplies of food and fuel grow dangerously short. We got acute cabin fever (幽居病) and started going for walks and ski expeditions outside. Even when the weather finally broke, nobody came to get us even though it was three days beyond our scheduled pickup. By the time the rescue team came to pull us out, we had all given up hope.
From then on, the world looks different to me, as does my life. It would have taken me years of psychotherapy to get to the same point.
Almost everyone has a story to tell, and interestingly, most of these experiences were not altogether pleasant at the time. In fact, it appears that the most constructive life-changing journeys were those that involved some sorts of awful and uncomfortable events that forced the person to develop new resources, increase confidence, and solve problems in new ways.
【小题1】The writer went to Iceland to ______.
| A.enjoy the natural beautiful floating icebergs |
| B.take photos about the region for a book |
| C.collect materials for psychological research |
| D.challenge the high mountains there |
| A.they got lost in the mountain |
| B.they were short of food and fuel |
| C.they couldn’t see the surroundings clearly |
| D.they failed to get in touch with the rescue team |
| A.were in despair before they were rescued |
| B.stayed in the hut for three days altogether |
| C.got sick because of going for ski outside |
| D.got rescued immediately the weather turned fine |
| A.The writer is a travel agent who loves difficult challenges. |
| B.In Iceland the weather is always extreme and it snows a lot. |
| C.The travellers were so depressed that they needed psychotherapy. |
| D.Awful journeys may become life-changing events that inspire people. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
I never thought I would have a lifechanging experience at WalMart.
Although my thoughts were only on speed,the checkout line I was standing in wasn’t moving as quickly as I wanted,and I glanced toward the cashier.
There stood a man in his seventies,wearing glasses and a nice smile.I thought,well,he’s an old guy!
For the next few minutes I watched him.He greeted every customer before scanning the items.Sure,his words were the usual,“How’s it going?” But he did something different—he actually listened to people.Then he would respond to what they had said and engage them in brief conversation.
I thought it was odd.I had grown accustomed to people asking me how I was doing simply out of robotic conversational habit.After a while,you don’t give any thought to the question and just mumble something back.I could say,“I just found out I have six months to live,” and someone would reply,“Have a great day!”
But that wasn’t the end.
He gave them the change,walked around the counter,and extended his right hand in an act of friendship.He looked the customers in the eyes.“I sure want to thank you for shopping here today,” he told them.“You have a great day.Byebye.”
The looks on the faces of the customers were priceless.There were smiles and some sheepish grins.All had been touched by his simple gesture—and in a place they never expected.They would gather their things and walk out,smiling.
Of course,he did the same to me and I got to know his name,Marty.
Who was that guy?It was as if Sam Walton had come back from the dead and invaded this old guy’s body.
I had never walked away from that shop feeling like that.
【小题1】The checkout line the writer was standing in moved slower than expected because ________.
| A.the cashier couldn’t work as fast as others |
| B.there were some big purchases |
| C.the cashier did more than scanning the items |
| D.the writer was not patient enough |
| A.they don’t really care what you may answer |
| B.they are just practicing their conversation ability |
| C.they are inquiring about your private information |
| D.they don’t expect to hear any negative answers |
| A.They thought it priceless. |
| B.They were in some way moved. |
| C.They thought it awful and odd. |
| D.They felt somewhat offended. |
| A.Our everyday life is always full of surprises. |
| B.Most customers enjoy being treated this way. |
| C.Being different is a good way of doing business. |
| D.A little positive action can make a big difference. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Father’s Garden
My father was always a good(酷爱的) gardener. One of my earliest memories is standing without shoes in the freshly tilled(翻耕的) soil, my hands blackened from digging in the ground.
As a child, I loved following Dad around in the garden. I remember Dad pushing the tiller(耕作机) ahead in perfectly straight lines. Dad loved growing all sorts of things: yellow and green onions, watermelons almost as big as me, rows of yellow corn, and our favorite--- red tomatoes.
As I grew into a teenager, I didn’t get so excited about gardening with Dad. Instead of magical land of possibility, it had turned into some kind of prison. As Dad grew older, his love for gardening never disappeared. After all the kids were grown and had started families of their own, Dad turned to gardening like never before. Even when he was diagnosed with cancer, he still took care of his garden.
But then, the cancer, bit by bit, invaded his body. I had to do the things he used to do. What really convinced me that Dad was dying was the state of his garden that year. The rows and rows of multicolored vegetables were gone. Too tired to weed them, he simply let them be. He only planted tomatoes.
For the first few years after he died, I couldn’t even bear to look at anyone’s garden without having strong memories pour over me like cold water from a bucket. Three years ago, I decided to plant my own garden and started out with just a few tomatoes. That morning, after breaking up a fair amount of soil, something caught the corner of my eye and I had to smile. It was my eight-year-old son Nathan, happily playing in the freshly tilled soil.
【小题1】Why did the author like the garden when he was a child?
| A.He wanted to be a garden-crazy like his father. |
| B.He loved being in the garden with his father. |
| C.The garden was full of his favorite food. |
| D.The garden was just freshly tilled. |
| A.stopped his gardening. |
| B.turned to other hobbies. |
| C.devoted more to gardening. |
| D.focused on planting tomatoes. |
| A.There was a great harvest. |
| B.The garden was almost deserted. |
| C.No plant grew in the garden at all. |
| D.The author’s son took charge of the garden. |
| A.He wanted to honor his father. |
| B.His son liked the fields of tomatoes. |
| C.He only knew how to grow tomatoes. |
| D.He thought tomatoes were easy to manage. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
When most people travel, they spend some time booking hotel rooms. However, my friend Ashley and I were not like most people many years ago. We decided that backpacking through Ireland would be more fun if we “winged it”.
Winging it, of course, meant that we’d each buy a one-way ticket to Dublin, and give ourselves ten days to get back to Bath, England, where we were enrolled in a study-abroad program. The plan was to visit Dublin, Galway, Cong, and finally end things in Belfast, where we figured we could catch a flight back to England.
Unfortunately, Ireland had other plans for us, as nothing worked out the way in which we thought it would. After getting stuck in Galway and Cong for about seven days, we finally managed to take a bus trip from Cong to Belfast. The twelve-hour bus ride started at ten in the morning, which meant that we’d arrive in the heart of Belfast at around ten at night. Of course, like all transport, the bus ran late, and we ended up in Belfast at around eleven-thirty at night. As there were a ton of hotels around the area where it dropped us off, we weren’t too worried about finding a hotel room. But hotel after hotel turned us down.
After the third hotel turned us down and the fourth one was locked up for the night, Ashley and I started to realize that we had to spend a long night sleeping on a city bench. Like militant soldiers, we slept in turn as we were worried we would get robbed. The system worked, as we were able to stay safe while catching as much sleep as we could on the bench.
From this experience, I really learnt a good lesson.
【小题1】Why did the author and his friend decide to wing it when they went to travel in Ireland? (No more than 8 words)
【小题2】What did the author and his friend do in Bath, England? (No more than 8 words)
【小题3】How long did it take the author and his friend to get to Belfast from Cong by bus? (No more than 5 words)
【小题4】Why did the author and his friend have to take turns to sleep? (No more than 8 words)
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Helen Thomas, the pioneering White House reporter known for putting presidents on the hot seat, died at 92.
To those who regularly watch presidential press conferences, Helen Thomas is a familiar figure.Usually dressed in red and always seated in the front row, she is always the first or second reporter the president calls upon.It is an honor she has earned.Besides, it affords her the perfect opportunity to do what she does best - challenge the president and other public officials to tell the plain truth.She said, "We reporters' priority(首要事情) is the people's right to know - without fear or favor.We are the people's servants."
Helen Thomas was born in Kentucky in 1920.All the nine Thomas children were brought up to value education, and all were expected to make something of themselves through working hard.She made up her mind while still in high school to become a reporter after writing for the student newspaper.After receiving her bachelor's degree in 1942, Thomas headed straight for Washington, D.C.in search of a newspaper job.Before long, she landed one at Washington Daily News.Her duty included fetching coffee and doughnuts for the paper's reporters and editors.The eager young woman found the atmosphere exciting and was convinced she had made the right career choice.
Her big break came when she was sent to Florida to report on the vacation of President-elect John F.Kennedy and his family.Once President Kennedy took office, Thomas changed her focus from the president's family to his policies.She began attending the daily press briefings at the White House as well as presidential press conferences.Thomas has covered every president since Kennedy.Over the years, Thomas found her job "thrilling and inspiring," but never boring.And she took very seriously her duty to "keep an eye on the president" and keep American people informed.
【小题1】What can we learn about Helen Thomas from the passage?
| A.Her career took off after covering the Kennedys. |
| B.Her first job was to deliver doughnuts to a news agency. |
| C.She was born to a large family in Kentucky in 1942. |
| D.She decided to be a reporter while in college. |
| A.is a good decision maker for her career |
| B.appreciates education and hard work |
| C.wants to be famous by writing reports |
| D.has great support from her family |
| A.Unbearable. | B.Exciting. | C.Challenging. | D.Unforgettable. |
| A.A reporter sticking to the facts. |
| B.A reporter challenging President Kennedy. |
| C.A reporter from an ordinary family. |
| D.A reporter for Washington Daily News. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Canadian short story writer Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Eighty-two-year-old Munro is only the 13th woman to win the 112-year-old prize.
Munro didn’t publish her first collection of short stories until she was 37 years old, but her stories have always been well-received. Lots of her stories share similar themes and characters, but each story has its own twists and turns.
Even though she’s won Canada’s most famous literary award, the Giller Prize, twice, winning the Nobel Prize for Literature is the cherry on top of Munro’s career. “It brings this incredible recognition, both of her and her career, and of the dedication to the short story,” said one person.
Along with the well-respected title comes 1.3 million dollars. Munro said everything was “so surprising and wonderful” and that she was “dazed by all the attention and affection that has been coming my way.”
Munro knew she was in the running——she was named the second-most likely person to win this year’s prize, after Haruki Murakami (村上春树)of Japan——but she never thought that she would win.
Munro’s win also represents the long way Canadian writers have come. “When I began writing there was a very small community of Canadian writers and little attention was paid by the world. Now Canadian writers are read, admired and respected around the globe,” Munro said on Thursday.
She is technically not the first Canadian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, but many like to think that she is. In 1976 Saul Bellow, who was born in Quebec but moved to Chicago when he was still a child, won the prize. Even though he was born in Canada, he is mostly considered to be an American writer.
“This is a win for us all. Canadians, by our very nature, are not very nationalistic,” said Geoffrey Taylor. “But things like this suddenly make you want to find a flag.”
She wasn’t sure if she would keep writing if she won the prize, saying that it would be “nice to go out with a bang. But this may change my mind.”
【小题1】What is the feature of Munro’s stories?
| A.They have their own complicated (复杂的)contents. |
| B.They have similar story backgrounds. |
| C.They have specific themes for children. |
| D.They have the same characters in each book. |
| A.her love for Canadian culture |
| B.her devotion to the short story |
| C.her special form of writing |
| D.her career of editing short stories |
| A.Canadian writers paid little attention to the prize. |
| B.Canadian writers are just a small community. |
| C.Canadian writers have long been ignored. |
| D.Canadians have a long way to win the prize. |
| A.How Alice Munro wins the Nobel Prize |
| B.An introduction to the Nobel Prize in Literature |
| C.Alice Munro wins the Nobel Prize in Literature |
| D.A world famous writer, Alice Munro |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Anyone who cares about what schools and colleges teach and how their students learn will be interested in the memoir(回忆录)of Ralph W. Tyler, who is one of the most famous men in American education.
Born in Chicago in 1902, brought up and schooled in Nebraska, the 19-year-old college graduate Ralph Tyler became hooked on teaching while teaching as a science teacher in South Dakota and changed his major from medicine to education.
Graduate work at the University of Chicago found him connected with honorable educators Charles Judd and W. W. Charters, whose ideas of teaching and testing had an effect on his later work. In 1927, he became a teacher of Ohio State University where he further developed a new method of testing.
Tyler became well-known nationality in 1938, when he carried his work with the Eight-Year Study from Ohio State University to the University of Chicago at the invitation of Robert Hutchins.
Tyler was the first director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, a position he held for fourteen years. There, he firmly believed that researchers should be free to seek an independent spirit in their work.
Although Tyler officially retired in 1967, he never actually retired. He served on a long list of educational organizations in the United States and abroad. Even in his 80s he traveled across the country to advise teachers and management people on how to set objectives(目标)that develop the best teaching and learning within their schools.
【小题1】Who are most probably interested in Ralph W. Tyler’s memoir?
| A.Top managers. | B.Language learners. |
| C.Serious educators. | D.Science organizations. |
| A.attracted to teaching | B.tired of teaching |
| C.satisfied with teaching | D.unhappy about teaching |
| A.The University of Chicago. | B.Stanford University. |
| C.Ohio State University. | D.Nebraska University. |
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