1、新视野大学英语(第二版)听说教程第四册录音文本Un i t1Warming upM:Vbure telling me that youd rather be famous than be respected as a good person?W:Well,I dont know.Its just that I see all these famous people on TV,and,well,its hard not to want the same thing for myself-attention,love from millions of people.M:Love?Do you t
2、hink people actually love celebrities?I dont think so!The public enjoys watching famous people get into trouble even more than they like watching them succeed.Besides,being a famous person means never having time to yourself-appearing before crowds,having people follow you around 24-7.Believe me,it
3、isnt fun.W:Ydu talk as if you know something about celebrity.Were you ever famous?M:bu know the old saying,Everyone has his 15 minutes of fame?Well,I expect to have my 15 minutes someday.But I dont expect to like itShort conversationW:You dont really seem interested in painting pictures,so why did y
4、ou apply to this art program?M:lb be honest,I thought that through art,I could become famous.Pretty stupid,huh?Q:What can be inferred from this conversation?2.W:Ydu have everything you ever wanted!But why do you look so blue?M:Ah,man,I discovered that all those things-money,fame,and the lot-are all
5、empty.And in trying to get them,I ignored my art.Q:Why is the man not happy?W:Hey,Marty.Whats the matter,pal?When you first started writing,you did so much better work.Are you bored or something?M:I know my work is suffering,but I dont know the reason.I dont seem so interested anymore.Maybe,as you s
6、aid,I am bored.Who knows?Q:What are the speakers talking about?4.W:Is it true what they say about the director?Does he really work for art,not for fame?M:That*s what people say,and l*m inclined to believe them.He certainly hasn,t sold out to the cheap film companies.Q:What can be inferred from the c
7、onversation?5.W:WhaVs on the schedule for tonights show?Something l*m likely to enjoy?M:You might like it-a story about a dancer who sells his soul to become famous and then loses his friends,family,and everything importantQ:What is tonights show about?6.W:Isnt that the man who won an Academy Award
8、for his cartoon artwork?M:What?That tramp?Hey,you know,I think youre right.Man,what happened to him?He was really famous!Q:What happened to the artist at last?W:Look!Look!Look!Look at me.Dad!Ive done it!Success,money,popularity.The world is at the tip of my fingers and I feel like a q ueen!M:Sweethe
9、art,I think you need to cool down a bit.Dont let all of this success go to your head.Q:What has happened to the woman?W:Get a grip on yourself!Dont you dare q uit your job!Ybu really think you can succeed as an actor?Do you really think you can become famous?M:I dont think I need to be famous to suc
10、ceed.Im sure I can get work as an extra and then maybe move on to more interesting roles.Q:What are the speakers talking about?M:Hey,you!Watch out!Wheres your head?Walking in front of cars like that?W:Huh?Ah!Oh!Sorry,I mean.thanks.I just received word from my agent that my book is to be published.Is
11、nt it wonderful?Sorry I was daydreaming about the fame to come and forgot to look at the traffic.Q:Where is the conversation taking place?10.W:Thanks for coming in.I loved your work,but I wish it looked more like your previous pieces.M:God!I knew it!Complaints from my teacher,my mother.even my docto
12、r!And now,my boss?Since I became famous,no one will let me change!Q:What is the relationship between the speakers?Long conversationsM:Theres only one thing in life worse than being talked about,and thats not being talked about.W:That was said by Oscar Wild e,wasnt it?M:Thats right.Youre pretty smart
13、.W:I have my moments.But Im afraid that I wont remember anything else for your test tomorrow.M:Well,lets have a run-through.First,what can you remember about Wilde?W:The basics,obviously British,19th centu ry writer.He was gay,wasnt he?M:Thats right.And he actually went to jail for it.W:Why?There mu
14、stve been many gays in England at the time.Why was he singled out to be put in prison?Or,were the English throwing all gays in jail?M:No,not everyone.But things were different for Wilde.A famous person,like him,isnt free to do what he likes.People paid more attention to his actions.There were report
15、ers,and everything that he said and did was watched carefully.W:Yeah?It mightve been better for him if he wasnt famous.M:Maybe.But,then again,if he wasnt well-known,we might not have his wonderful stories today.1.What are the speakers talking about?2.What did Oscar Wilde say?3.What is the probable r
16、elationship between the speakers?4.Why was Oscar Wilde treated differently?5.What can be inferred from the conversation?Ybu young people go crazy over famous people.Will you listen to me when I tell you your generation is wrong abou t this?Let me use an example to illustrate my point to you.Marilyn
17、Monroe,you might not even know who she is.Back in my day,when I was your age,she was a big movie star.But she wasnt born a movie star,no sir.She was a simple girl with beauty and innocence until she went to Hollywood to make movies.Thats right.Instead of living out a simple life of integrity and har
18、d work or trying to develop a respectable name in her profession,she sought fame.Well,DI tell you,she got her wish.She made her movies AH About Eve in 1950,Gentlemen Prefer Blondes in 1953,Some Like It Hot in 1959,and more.She got into trouble throughout-drugs,abuse.All of this came crashingdown on
19、her head,and she died at an early age in 1962.Sad,really.I hope that this example shows you the dangers of fame.Believe me,its best just to live a simple life.1.What is the speaker talking about?2.What is TRUE according to what you hear?3.Why did Monroe go to Hollywood?4.When was Some Like It Hot ma
20、de?5.Why is the speaker telling this story?Taskl 第 12 页W:How important are friends to you,Bill?M:Thats kind of a strange q uestion for this setting,dont you think so?W:Well,the teacher hasnt come in yet,class hasnt begun,and I was just wondering about it.So,what do you think about friend s?M:Ive nev
21、er regard ed them as particularly important.Perhaps thats because I come from a big family two brothers and three sisters,and lots of cousins.Thats whats really important to me.What about you,Emma?W:My situation,you know,is different,so I have different ideas,lb me friendship.having friends.people I
22、 know I can really count on.to me thats the most important thing in life.Its more important even than love.If you love someone,you can always fall out of love again,and that can lead to a lot of hurt feelings and bitterness.But a good friend is a friend for life.M:In my mind,a friend is someone who
23、likes the same things as you do,with whom you can argue without losing your temper,even if you dont always agree with him.Questions 1 to 5 are based on the conversation you have just heard.1.What are the speakers talking about?2.What has the man always thought?3.What can be inferred from the convers
24、ation?4.What d oes the man think about friends?5.Where is the conversation taking place?Task2 第 13 页At the age of 41,Clark Gable,one of Hollywoods biggest actors,enlisted in the army,serving in World War II.Gables postwar films were,for the most part,disappointing,as was his 1949 marriage.Dropped by
25、 both his wife and his studio,Gable ventured out as a freelance actor in 1955,q uickly becoming the highest paid actor in Hollywood.He again found happiness with his fifth wife and continued his career in such critical failures as Teachers Pet,released in 1958.In 1960,Gable was signed for the Hmoder
26、n Western,The Misfits.The troubled and tragic history of this film has been well documented,but,despite the on-set tension,Gable took on the task uncomplainingly,going so far as to perform several grueling stunt scenes involving wild horses.The strain of filming,however,coupled with his ever-robust
27、lifestyle,proved too much for the actor.Clark Gable suffered a heart attack two days after the completion of The Misfits and died in 1960 at the age of 59,just a few months before the birth of his first son.Most of the nations newspapers announced the death of Clark Gable with a four-word headline:T
28、he King is Dead?Questions 1 to 5 are based on the passage you have just heard.1.What is this passage about?2.When did Gable become a freelance actor?3.What can we know about Gable from the passage?4.What is described as being tragicw in the passage?5.What can be inferred from the passage?Warming upM
29、:Lad ies and gentlemen,novelist and poet,Sandra Marie.W:Thank you,thank you.M:Thank you for joining us.W:Its a pleasure to be here.Ybu know,I watch your show every day.M:Do you really?Well,these days there are many people watching you.W:Yes,Ive gotten a lot of attention lately-thats true-all because
30、 of my little book.M:Oh.dont be modest!Ybur book is amazingly bold,one of the most original pieces offiction Ive ever read.W:Originality is important,for sure.In fact,I think it is the most important part of being a creative person.Surely,it doesnt make much sense to write something,or do something,
31、that has been done before or even that is similar in style to anything else already put out there.M:Well put!Thank you!Sandra Marie.everybody?Short conversationW:I dont q uite understand what made Charlie Chaplin such a popular movie star.M:Serious?Look at his work and compare it to other films of t
32、he time.He was so original that people were really surprised by his films.Q:What can be inferred from the conversation?2.W:My drama teacher said Chaplin is an excellent model for a young actor to pattern himself on.M:fd be hard-pressed to argue with that.The guy was innovative and possessed such a c
33、reative mind.Yeah,try to be like him.Q:What are the speakers talking about?W:Ive given some thought to entering politics when I get older-you know,maybe working behind the scenes to help someone get a position in government.M:Why not run for office yourself?Are you afraid of standing out as a female
34、 politician?Q:What can be inferred from the conversation?W:I admire her,not because shes a woman in the tough,male world of international politics,but because shes so honest.M:Ybah,I feel the same way.Certainly,there arent many people as true to their word as she is.Q:What does the man think about t
35、he politician?5.W:Ydu know,our family is really special.Many of our ancestors are remembered as great inventors and scientists who contributed new ideas to society.M:论s,thats what Ive also heard from Uncle Marty.He said our family tree was full of geniuses.Q:What are the speakers talking about?6.W:D
36、id you see what I made?Its a light bulb thatll never burn out.M:Thats amazing!A thing like that could make you famous.Ybu should contact a patent office as soon as possible and register a claim!Q:What will make the woman famous?W:No matter what a person says about me,no one can say that Im not origi
37、nal.M:For sure,thats one criticism that no one will hit you with.Ybur artwork is definitely uniq ue.And I think thats really important.Q:According to the man,what should be valued above all else?W:What do you think?Is it dangerous to be unlike other people sometimes?M:Nah.I think its more dangerous
38、to be similar to others-thats when you run the risk of becoming insignificant and forgotten.Q:According to the man,what is dangerous?M:I suppose I couldve been successful by being like other people,but I felt that I should express my own original ideas.And I think this is a lesson you should learn.W
39、:Ma says the same thing about her success.I guess thinking the same about that is what first brought you two together?Q:What is the relationship between the speakers?10.W:Im not saying that your work is poor,just that it lacks imagination.You havent done anything to set yourself apart from your clas
40、smates.M:If my assignments look so much like others,why do you give me lower grades than you give them?Q:What is the relationship between the speakers?Long conversationsM:Look at you,all dressed up in a bowler hat,looking all dapper like Charlie Chaplin.Its not Halloween,though.Are you going to leav
41、e the house looking like that?W:Would you believe that Im going to a party?M:If there was a party tonight,I wouldve heard about it by now.So whats the deal?W:Im auditioning for a film.I thought,well,this look worked well for Chaplin.M:So you thought itd work for you.I dont think much of that idea.W:
42、Why not?Chaplin got a lot of success because of his Little Tramp costume.And Ive copied it exactly.M:Chaplin did very well-but thats because the look was original.He didnt copy anyone in Hollywood.W:But look,Im a woman,a woman dressed like Chaplin.Thats original,isnt it?M:Im afraid not Im pretty sur
43、e that Ive seen other women do the same thing.If you really want to succeed like Chaplin did,you should do what he did.Try to invent and develop something people havent seen before.W:I guess youre right.Ill go back up to my room and change.1.What are the speakers talking about?2.Why is the woman dre
44、ssed like Chaplin?3.What can be inferred from the conversation?4.Besides be originar,what advice does the man have for the woman?5.Where is the conversation taking place?Some people stand out as truly special and one of a kind.Charlie Chaplin,a superstar of silent comedies and one of the great icons
45、 of the 20th-century film,is one of those uniq ue people.Chaplin had a rotten childhood and an early start on stage,performing even as a child in vaudeville.He went to Hollywood in 1914 and began acting in silent comedies.By 1915,he controlled most aspects of his films,in which he usually appeared a
46、s a character called simply the Little Tramp:a lovably shabby dreamer with a bushy moustache,bowler hat and cane.Chaplin was one of the founders of United Artists Studios and was one of the first movie makers to have complete control over his features.His best-known films include 1925s The Gold Rush
47、,1931s City Lights,and 1936s Modern Times.Famouslyoutspoken and sympathetic to communism,Chaplin left the United States in 1952 because of increased political pressure.He settled in Switzerland,where he and his wife Oona raised eight children,including actress Geraldine Chaplin.In 1972 he returned t
48、o the United States to accept a special Oscar,and in 1975,he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.1.What is this passage about?2.What did Chaplin do when he went to Hollywood?3.What did the Little Tramp look like?4.What can be inferred from the passage?5.When did the Queen make Chaplin a knight?Home w
49、ork Ta ski 第 29 页W:My friends have compared my film to the best of Orson Welles works.How can you criticize it?M:Ydu.Welles?I,well,um,I appreciate your confidence in yourself.But you do know who Welles was,right?W:Nah.I dont watch films by British directors.M:Ybu really dont know who Welles was at a
50、ll!Welles was American!Do you even pay attention to my lectures?W:I dont listen to people talk about films;I make films.Im a doer.M:Ydu really have to pay attention from now on.Welles first became famous on the radio,especially for his reading of War of the Worlds in 1938.Three years later,he made h