Finding art in the execution
RACHEL HERGETT
For the Chronicle
For Jane Herzog, the art is in the process, in the execution of a plan.
“My di erent mediums are repetitive,” Herzog said in an interview at her Bozeman studio last week. “Make a plan. Execute it. When it’s done, you know it.”
is isn’t the case with a painting or a drawing, Herzog explained. With those mediums, an artist usually starts with an idea of what they want to convey, then can keep adding until they feel like it is nished, “but you never really know.”
Instead, Herzog naturally gravitated toward printmaking, quilting and now modular origami forms, leaning into mediums that have some meaning in her world. She speaks fondly of the quilters in her family, the time her grandmothers and great grandmothers spent crafting usable pieces that feel like history in her hands.
“Visual art and cultural objects bring people together,” Herzog
said. “ ey bring people together through time and space and people who don’t know anything else about each other can still feel connected.”
Music, she said, is the same. Herzog’s work hanging at Studio Co ee in Bozeman features two prints named after songs from e Doors, after the rock band fronted by Jim Morrison appeared in her dreams. “Learn to Forget” features, ttingly, a bunch of doors in a repeating pattern. “Break on rough” is more of a
printed explosion.
Herzog, who also played with Bozeman rock band e Tarns, has always been an artist. Her parents, who are both musicians, encouraged exploration of creativity in all forms. Herzog felt out of place in Eden Prairie, an a uent suburb of Minneapolis that she describes as culturally homogenous, clinging to the ideals of suburban America and lled with chain restaurants and big box stores. Art classes made her feel seen.
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“Movie:
Nature Calls”
After his troops ditch him for a slumber party at the posh home of his rival brother (Johnny Knoxville), a scoutmaster (Patton Oswalt) lures the youths away in the middle of the night for an ill-advised camping trip. Rob Riggle, Patrice O’Neal and Maura Tierney also star.
“Movie:
3:10 to Yuma”
A remake of the classic western film from 1957, this 2007 action flick follows outlaw Ben Wade (Russell Crowe), who terrorized 1800s Arizona, especially the Southern Railroad, until he was finally captured. Wade must be brought to trial in Yuma to answer for his crimes, so Dan Evans (Christian Bale), the owner of a drought-stricken ranch, volunteers to escort him to the train. Along the trail, a grudging respect forms between the men, but danger looms at every turn, and the criminal’s men are in pursuit.
“Movie: Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter”
Based on the novel of the same name by Seth Grahame-Smith, this 2012 fantasy horror film is set in 1800s America. After loosing his mother to a vampire bite and barely escaping with his life as a boy, Abraham Lincoln (Benjamin Walker) dedicated his life to getting revenge. He is rescued by Henry (Dominic Cooper), a charismatic vampire hunter who instructs Abe in the fine art of dispatching bloodsuckers. Abe continues his fight against the undead well into adulthood and his presidency, making a last stand against the ultimate vampire foe, Adam (Rufus Sewell), and his cohorts to thwart their plan to take over the country.
“CMA
Fest: 50 Years of Fan Fair”
This new documentary special celebrates CMA Fest’s humble beginnings, as told through exclusive one-on-one interviews, never-before-seen archival footage and CMA Fest performances. The film features interviews with Country artists including Bill Anderson, Kelsea Ballerini, Dierks Bentley, BRELAND, Brooks & Dunn, Brothers Osborne, Luke Bryan, Shy Carter, Luke Combs, Valierie Ellis Hawkins, Vince Gill, Wynonna Judd, Miranda Lambert, Patty Loveless, Reba McEntire, Mark Miller, Craig Morgan, Lorrie Morgan, Dolly Parton, Carly Pearce, Jeannie Seely, Blake Shelton, Frankie Staton, Thomas Rhett, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Lainey Wilson, Trisha Yearwood and Chris Young.
ACROSS
1. Tabula ___
5. Test for M.A. seekers
8. Leg in a film noir
11. Kelly Clarkson is one
12. Scottish hillside
13. “I ___ you one”
14. Reality series set aboard a luxury yacht
16. Dinghy propeller
17. “May the ___ be with you”
18. Salon supply
19. TV superhero drama “Legends ___” 23. The whole shebang
referenced in
19 Across
42. Suffix with form
43. One who inks
47. Put on TV
48. Ho-hum
49. Some N.C.O.’s
50. Butterfly catcher
51. 2015 disaster film
“___ Andreas”
52. Voice mail prompt
DOWN
1. Barbecue offering
2. Fruity summer drink
3. Costa del ___
4. Skyward
5. ___-Roman wrestling
6. Speed demon
7. Cartoon scream
12. Real estate ad abbr.
15. Romance
19. Mishmash or hodgepodge
20. Workflow diagram
21. Engine speed, for short
22. Neighbor of Ida.
23. Quick on the uptake
25. Like some points
26. Chicken ___
28. Merkel of old movies
29. Abbr. on old maps
34. Start of a joyous refrain
35. Odin’s Germanic moniker
36. Babe with a bat
37. “Who am ___ say?”
38. Supernatural reality series “Celebrity ___ Stories”
NOT EVERYONE CARES ENOUGH TO HELP.
Do
32. Former “Couger Town” star Courteney
33. Actress Nancy, who voices Bart Simpson
41. Actor Brandon, who starred in the show
8. Hallmark Channel dramedy that starred an enchanting Catherine Bell
9. Hit musical “Come from ___”
10. Nothing other than
39. Chinese dollar
40. Nobel Prize-winning author Wiesel
43. Cable inits.
44. “Where did ___ wrong?”
45. RR stop
46. Half of an African fly
BY JAY BOBBINShaun Evans OF
Q: With “Endeavour on Masterpiece” coming to its end, are you a fan of detective shows anyway?
A: Because of the nature of the work, it can kind of ruin watching stuff because you can sort of see the (connections in the mystery) … for me, at least. You can see, “Oh, there’s the red herring. There’s the this or the that.” That’s not about American shows, that’s just about shows in general. Also, I find it quite difficult when you are working to watch other stuff, because it takes you out of the moment.
Q: You’ve also directed several episodes of “Endeavour on Masterpiece.” How was it to do that job while also acting in the show?
A: It was an extraordinary experience from start to finish. I’d been directing for a few years prior to that, but it was the first time I’d done anything that I was in. And it was extraordinary because you realize what you can achieve if you’re prepared and if you’ve got a good team around you.
We shot my episode, the (first) one that I directed, first (that season). And then I did my edit in post-production over the weekend while we were shooting the next three episodes. So that was challenging, only in terms of trying to keep a couple of stories in your head at all times and to give every moment its full weight and attention. But it’s an extraordinary opportunity, and I just wanted to make the most of it.
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“Barrabrava: Season 1”
A drama that goes beyond sport, Barrabrava is a story of power, ambition, family, love, and lust following César (Gastón Pauls) and Polaco (Matías Mayer), brothers and key pieces in the operation of the barra brava, a group of soccer hooligans, of Club Atlético Libertad del Puerto. Historically led by “El Tío” (Gustavo Garzón), the two brothers are expelled from the barra of their beloved club after a fierce internal fight. On their own, with neither money nor political power or protection, they will stir up a war that will place their personal brotherhood to the test.
“The Brady Bunch: Complete Series”
This classic family sitcom begins when a man named Mike Brady (Robert Reed), an architect widower with three sons — Greg (Barry Williams), Peter (Christopher Knight) and Bobby (Mike Lookinland) — meets and marries Carol (Florence Henderson), who has three daughters of her own — Marcia (Maureen McCormick), Jan (Eve Plumb) and Cindy (Susan Olsen). With their wacky maid named Alice (Ann B. Davis), this blended family all live in a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house in the Los Angeles suburbs. The story follows the family as they deal with growing up, growing together and making the best of their lives.
Join the Club Uncork the Fun!
“The Horror of Dolores Roach”
Based on the hit Spotify podcast series of the same name, this series is a contemporary, Sweeney Todd-inspired urban legend of love, betrayal, weed, cannibalism and survival of the fittest in New York City. Dolores Roach (Justina Machado) is released from prison after 16 years and returns to a gentrified Washington Heights. She reunites with an old stoner friend, Luis (Alejandro Hernandez), who lets her live and work as a masseuse in the basement under his empanada shop. When the promise of her newfound stability is quickly threatened, “Magic Hands” Dolores is driven to shocking extremes to survive.
“Movie: Los Iniciados”
Bogotá, Colombia, in the year 2031 looks verily similar to Bogotá in 2022—the same streets, same buildings, same people. But now uncontaminated water is rationed, blackouts are more frequent, and the fight for power over the city has reached new heights. Here, Frank Molina, a troubled crime reporter, confronts powerful and obscure forces that inhabit the hidden most layers of the city’s society when an old informant winds up murdered—the day after she reaches out to Frank for help. His investigation into the homicide unravels a much larger mystery involving a forbidden love story, political corruption, massacres in the moonlight and water.
V
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Solution on page 12
Create a Meaningful Farewell
more people are making arrangements in advance to lift the burden from loved ones and provide a sense of calm. We are grateful to the families we serve and appreciate your confidence in our ability to create meaningful services that help begin the healing
BY CAROLINE COLLACUTTCake or con: Season 2 of Netflix’s ‘Is it Cake?’ makes deception delectable
Designed to trick even the most trained eye, illusion cakes have become an internet sensation, with shows like “Is It Cake?” reaching massive audiences of dedicated viewers, and popular TikTokers and YouTubers like Jonny Cakes (Jonny Manganello, who competed in Season 1 of “Is It Cake?”) creating hyperrealistic baked goods for thousands upon thousands of followers and subscribers online. These reality-bending cakes delight and confuse, and for fans looking to bite into more – of what’s hopefully cake – Season 2 of the cake decorating series, aptly named “Is it Cake, Too?” is now available to stream on Netflix.
The series features eight new episodes, all hosted by “Saturday Night Live’s” Mikey Day, as he returns to the (very real) kitchen for his second season driving this – as Netflix calls it – “baking competition that makes you question the very fabric of reality.”
“Prepare for toilets, yoga mats, guitars, rollerblades and even a replica of the Mona Lisa to get sliced and diced in the process,” Netflix wrote in a recent news release, “as each week the cake artists put their incredibly niche skills to the test.”
The competition begins with 10 hopeful bakers, each faced with their first challenge before the eggs, butter and milk ever come out. First, the
contestants – all of whom specialize in hyperrealistic baking themselves – must identify the illusion cake hidden among a group of random, everyday objects – like, for instance, within a full-scale replica of Michael Day’s college dorm room. Only the bakers able to guess correctly will move on to the main competition.
From there, the remaining few must utilize their strangely specific skills to create their own illusion cakes within an eight-hour period. The cakes will then be presented to a panel of celebrity guest judges, who will have 20 seconds to determine which, in a line of near-identical objects, is actually cake. Those who fail to trick the judges will be eliminated from the game, and in the end, only one trickster-baker will be left, crowned champion of “Is it Cake, Too?”
This season, guest judges include Kate Flannery (“The Office”), Joel McHale (“Community”), Kirby Howell-Baptiste (“Barry”), Taylor Tomlinson (“Taylor Tomlinson: Look at You,” 2022), Anna Camp (“Pitch Perfect,” 2012), Chiney Ogwumike of the Los Angeles Sparks and many more, who put all five senses to the test as they judge creations on “Is It Cake, Too?,” now available to stream on Netflix.
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“Documentary: WHAM!”
“Special: Tom Segura: Sledgehammer”
Tom Segura returns to Netflix with his fifth comedy special following 2014’s “Completely Normal,” 2016’s “Mostly Stories,”
2018’s “Disgraceful” and 2020’s “Ball Hog.”
Performing to an energized sold-out crowd in Phoenix, Tom explores his “admiration” for Brad Pitt, what it’s like raising two sons, and the lessons he’s learned from sharing his gummies with his mother.
In 1982, best-offriends teenagers George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley set out to conquer the world as Wham! — and by June 1986, they played their very last gig at Wembley Stadium, having done exactly that. The amazing story of how they dominated the charts around the world with timeless and classic pop songs in just four years is told for the very first time and in their own words,. The film includes unprecedented access to both George and Andrew’s personal archives, including never-before-seen footage alongside rare, candid and previously unheard interviews, as the documentary charts their incredible journey from school friends to superstars.
“Movie: The Out-Laws”
This action comedy stars Adam Devine as Owen Browning, a straight-laced bank manager about to marry the love of his life, Parker (Nina Dobrev). When his bank is held up by the infamous Ghost Bandits during his wedding week, he believes his future in-laws (Pierce Brosnan, Ellen Barkin), who just arrived in town, are the infamous Out-Laws.
“Hack My Home”
The new reality renovation series follows deserving families that all have different versions of the same problem — their houses need more space, but they don’t want to move or break the bank to get what they need. Enter the dream team: design expert Mikel Welch, innovation expert Brooks Atwood, construction expert Ati Williams and engineering expert Jessica Banks, a robotics engineer-turned-inventor. The experts combine their skills to transform overpacked spaces into gorgeous homes that maximize every inch to their fullest potential using creative, out-of-the-box builds and solutions.
television puzzle
ACROSS
1. Garden veggies (2)
9. Flying insect
10. __ at; berate
11. Large workers’ union: abbr.
13. Depart
15. Fire starter
17. California’s state trees
18. 13th letter
20. 32 fluid oz.
21. “Annabel Lee” poet
23. Expected to arrive
24. Fishing pole
25. Stadium cry
26. Currently popular
29. Note of the scale
30. Chocolate treats
34. Hobo
36. Cass Elliot & Michelle Phillips
38. Plant
39. “Queen of Jazz”
42. Utilize
43. Horseshoe maker DOWN
1. Word of mild surprise
2. Fanny
3. Watched
4. 90 degrees from NW
5. Actor Lancaster’s initials
6. “Sesame Street” character
7. Wacko
8. Anatomical pouch
9. Architect’s plans
12. Home with 35 bathrooms (2)
14. Boxer’s doc
16. Internet pop-ups
19. Night light
20. ATV
22. Man’s nickname
23. TV’s “__. Phil”
27. Word attached to chair or pit
28. Brewed drink
30. Weep
31. Intl. alliance founded in Iraq
32. Mosque leader
33. Pornography
35. Steal from
37. Hardwood tree
40. Initials for actress Kudrow
41. Hot Lips
Houlihan’s portrayer’s initials
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“SharkFest”
Sink your teeth into summer with 72 hours of programming about one of the ocean’s most fascinating and misunderstood creatures. Airing on National Geographic, Nat Geo WILD, Nat Geo Mundo, Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN2, this month-long shark celebration features programs that use cutting-edge technology and industry-leading experts to inform and entertain with explosive, hair-raising and celebratory shark programming that will showcase the captivating science, power, and beauty of these magnificent creatures. New programs include “Bull Shark Bandits,” “Shark Eat Shark,” “Saved From a Shark,” “When Sharks Attack 360,” “Return of the White Shark,” “Bull Shark vs. Hammerhead,” “Shark Below Zero” and much more.
“Pretty Freekin Scary: Season 1”
Revived from the popular kids’ book series of the same name by author Chris P. Flesh, the series follows the adventures of 14-year-old Frankie Ripp (Eliana Su’a), who once had a seemingly perfect life. Everything is going just as planned for Frankie, until an unexpected accident upends her life, sending her straight to the Underworld. Coming face-to-face with The Grim Reaper (Siobhan Murphy), Frankie pleads her case, begging to go back to “living” life. Grim agrees on one condition: Frankie must return alongside her new Underworld guardians, Pretty (Kyan Samuels) and Scary (Leah Mei Gold), who will keep an eye on her as she adjusts to her new life as a “once-dead” teenager. The hardest part of all? Frankie still has to go to middle school.
“Home in the Wild: Season 1”
This four-episode series follows the story of Jim and Tori Baird, a pair of adventurers who, after learning of their son Wesley’s rare neurological condition, discover the best place for their family to be is in the great outdoors. Together, along with Wesley and his baby brother, Jim and Tori head on a series of backcountry expeditions, looking to see how a totally-offthe-grid existence might prove beneficial for their family – in far more ways than one, as doctors explain that being immersed in nature may be key to help further Wesley’s development. Episodes see the Bairds trying a variety of new experiences with their sons, starting with an overnight canoe trip that takes the family through Class III rapids, over steep cliffs and through unfamiliar swamps, testing their endurance and strengthening their bonds before this well-traveled family reaches their final destination: Island Lake.
“Kizazi Moto: Generation Fire” his action-packed animated sci-fi anthology presents ten futuristic visions from Africa inspired by the continent’s diverse histories and cultures. Executive produced by Oscar-winning director Peter Ramsey, these ten short films made by a new generation of animation creators draw on uniquely African perspectives to imagine brave new worlds of advanced technology, aliens, spirits, and monsters.
Gonna fly now, again: AMC gets back in the ring with “Rocky”
Since it involves a famous bicentennial boxing bout, the Fourth of July is an appropriate time for a return visit from “Rocky.” AMC presents the 1976 Oscar winner for Best Picture on Tuesday, July 4, and Wednesday, July 5, with Sylvester Stallone starring in his own script as Rocky Balboa, a supposedly washed-up Philadelphia fighter who gets a surprising chance at a heavyweight championship against titleholder Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers).
“Rocky” became iconic rather quickly for its theme song (“Gonna Fly Now,” composed by Bill Conti) and such scenes as Rocky training for the big fight by running up the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Co-stars also include Burgess Meredith, Talia Shire and Burt Young, and AMC is showing several of the “Rocky” sequels (which eventually set up a “Creed” franchise) as well.
Puzzle Solutions
Sylvester Stallone and Burgess Meredith in “Rocky”Those seeking the closest meal site in the Bozeman area can text “LUNCH” or “COMIDA” to 304-304.
Kids 18 and Under Eat Free All Summer Long!
7 Lunch Locations Available Across Bozeman! Visit GallatinValleyFoodBank.org to learn more.
“You’re encouraged to think freely and be di erent in art,” Herzog said. “You’re not supposed to t some kind of mold — the less you do that, the better you are.”
Herzog came to Montana in 2009, studying graphic design at Montana State University for a year before dropping out to get residency. Six years later she returned to MSU, immediately falling in love with printmaking.
“ e rst project, I was like ‘I get this,’” Herzog said. “I feel like my body just knows how to do it.”
Printmaking, as she describes it, is a bodily process. e artist is feeling the carving as it is made, then working in tandem with the press in a rhythm that keeps the ink from drying.
e variety of mediums in her repertoire all require some form of repetition. She will sit for hours folding squares of paper (30 to be exact) into the same shape to create origami lamps. She nds comfort in the rhythms of creating modular pieces, preferring to work within inherent parameters and limitations of the medium.
can gure out how to work with that, to push those boundaries and still get a successful result, I think that’s really gratifying.”
Herzog has been a print assistant in Bozeman sculptor and printmaker John Buck’s workshop since spring 2019, collaborating on three to four editions a year. Aside from becoming a more technically skilled printmaker and pro cient in a woodshop, Herzog said Buck has taught her to be more patient in the creation of art. Herzog tends to get an idea and execute it expeditiously. If she doesn’t dive right in, the ideas tend to stack on top of each other and get lost in the shufe. Buck doesn’t do this.
variety of mediums in her repertoire all require some form of repetition. She will sit for hours folding squares of paper (30 to be exact) into the same shape to create origami lamps. She finds comfort in the rhythms of creating modular pieces, preferring to work within inherent parameters and limitations of the medium.
“He has a really long view of any project,” Herzog said.
When she talked with the Chronicle last week, Herzog was printing from a woodblock Buck had carved two years ago.
“He’s not willing to stop at good enough,” she explained. “He’s like ‘but it could still be better.’ And if it takes us another month, so be it.”
Working in Buck’s studio has prompted Herzog to explore different mediums, with quilting giving way to paper folding.
helped Herzog reconnect with an art form she hadn’t actively practiced in years. She sent her mother a picture of the book and turned to folding paper cranes out of squares cut from strips of paper used to color test inks for the printing process. She scoured the internet for more origami books and discovered modular origami, where folded paper squares t together to make larger, sometimes movable shapes.
“I started doing something simple and then dove head rst into the most complicated thing I could nd, of course,” Herzog said.
“I always said that what I loved about printmaking is the restrictions that it enforces on what you can do with it,” Herzog said. “Fabric is the same way. Folding paper is the same way… the material is only capable of a certain thing because of the way that it’s made. So if you
“I like to sew, but it doesn’t need to be my main thing,” she said.
Last year, when perusing Buck’s extensive art library, Herzog found a copy of a Japanese origami book — the same one her half-Japanese mother learned from as a child. e nd
Now she’s contemplating new designs, new folds. She’s thinking beyond the patterns in books to kinetic elements, experimenting with owers and lamps that open and close or sculptural forms akin to origami pieces but in di erent mediums. And she’s making a new plan: applying to graduate school to delve into the more theoretical and conceptual aspects of art.
“I want to go somewhere that is going to teach me how to really talk about my work and how to think about it in the world of art, not just in my own little practice,” she said.
The
Solution on page 12
sportsquiz
BY ALEX HENDRYWimbledon Championships
Questions:
1) A collection of 22 players gathered at the All England Club for the inaugural (first) Wimbledon Championship - what year did this occur?
2) In a game for the ages, one lasting 11 hours over the course of three days, Nicolas Mahut lost to which American player in 2010?
3) While playing on tournament courts, players are mandated to follow a dress code consisting of what sole color?
4) With “The Queen of Wimbledon” having won 9 times - which player holds the record for most tournament titles?
5) At just 17 years, 7 months - what player made history in 1985 as the youngest Men’s Single’s Wimbledon champion?
6) Which player became a U.K. sports icon - by snapping a 77-year drought upon winning the Men’s Final in 2013?
7) Serena Williams won 23 Grand Slam singles titles over her professional career - how many did she receive at Wimbledon?
8) A new era was ushered in when the Championship Finals of Wimbledon were first broadcast on television in what year?
9) Keeping with tradition the grass on Wimbledon courts are cut each day to a specific height - how tall is the court grass?
10) Employed for over fifteen years by the All England Club to scare away birds - what animal is Wimbledon employee Rufus?
Answers:
BY ROBERTO JOZEFGauff looks to recreate Wimbledon magic
The lawns of the All England Club have been prepped for another chapter of Wimbledon history, as one of the tournament’s rising stars, Cori ‘Coco’ Gauff, gets set for what’s expected to be a thrilling showdown.
Born to parents with NCAA Division I backgrounds, the highest level for college athletes, she always had a warm push to involve herself in sports and make it a career. Gauff, at the young age of 19, has been cementing her name in the history books, putting on displays of her raw talent, relentless work ethic and raising the bar of expectations at every tournament.
She first put herself on the map at the 2019 Wimbledon Championships when she shocked the world by defeating the legendary Venus Williams in the first round as a 15-year-old wild card, securing a dominant 6-4, 6-4 victory. She became the youngest player to advance to the fourth round of Wimbledon since 1991. Shortly after, she took her talents to the U.S. Open, where she once again became the youngest player to advance to the third round since 1991, later losing to Naomi Osaka. Despite the early setbacks, Gauff remained determined to grow and continue pushing herself.
Starting off 2020 ranked at No. 67, Gauff reached the fourth round of the Australian Open, giving her three Grand Slam appearances in a row with at least a fourth-round finish. While she has still yet to accomplish the ultimate feat of winning a Grand Slam championship, she’s been knocking on the door consistently. Last season she recorded her best major singles finish when she reached the French Open final, losing to world No. 1 Iga Swiatek in straight sets.
As the tennis world turns its focus to London, Gauff carries not just her own hopes but also the spirit of tennis’s bright future. As she continues to refine her skills and gain accolades, she looks poised for a better outcome at this year’s Wimbledon Championship.
Catch all the action from this year’s Wimbledon Championship when it airs live, beginning Monday, July 3, on ESPN and ESPN+.
Full name: Cori
Dionne (Coco) Gauff
Birth date: March 13, 2004
Birthplace: Atlanta, Georgia
Height/weight: 5-9/121 pounds
Fun Facts: Coco is currently ranked No. 6 in the world for singles and No. 3 in the world for doubles. Her favorite walkout songs are by The Weeknd, Jaden Smith and Childish Gambino.
Honors and achievements: Australian Open (4R) (2020, 2023), French Open (F) (2022), Wimbledon (4R) (2019, 2021), U.S. Open (QF) (2022).
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EMERGENCY CARE
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