title
stringlengths 1
261
| section
stringlengths 0
15.6k
| text
stringlengths 0
145k
|
---|---|---|
Bikfaya | Notable residents | Notable residents
Samy Gemayel (born 1980), Lebanese politician, son of Amine Gemayel and brother of Pierre Amine Gemayel |
Bikfaya | References | References |
Bikfaya | External links | External links
Bikfaya - Mhaiydseh , Localiban
Category:Populated places in Matn District |
Bikfaya | Table of Content | Infobox settlement
, Etymology, Geography, History, Bikfaya during the era of the Assafiyeen Emirs, Culture, Demography, Religious Structures, Tourism, Notable residents, References, External links |
Mamertinus of Auxerre | for | Saint Mamertinus of Auxerre () (d. ~462 AD) was a monk and abbot. He was converted by Germanus of Auxerre and became a monk at the Abbey of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Auxerre (later rededicated to Saint Marianus of Auxerre). He later served as its abbot. |
Mamertinus of Auxerre | References | References |
Mamertinus of Auxerre | External links | External links
Saints of March 30: Mamertinus
Category:Converts to Christianity from ancient Roman religions
Category:5th-century Christian saints
Category:Gallo-Roman saints |
Mamertinus of Auxerre | Table of Content | for, References, External links |
Epithelialization | # | redirect wound healing |
Epithelialization | Table of Content | # |
University Stadium | '''University Stadium''' | University Stadium may refer to:
University Stadium (Albuquerque), New Mexico, USA
University Stadium (West Georgia), Georgia, USA
University Stadium (Thiruvananthapuram), Kerala, India
University Stadium (Waterloo, Ontario), Canada
University Stadium (Winnipeg), Canada |
University Stadium | See also | See also
Estadio Universitario (disambiguation) |
University Stadium | Table of Content | '''University Stadium''', See also |
Paula cautiva | Unreferenced | Paula cautiva is a 1963 Argentine film directed by Fernando Ayala. It won the Silver Condor Award for Best Film. |
Paula cautiva | Cast | Cast |
Paula cautiva | External links | External links
Category:1963 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Argentine drama films
Category:Films directed by Fernando Ayala
Category:1960s Argentine films
Category:1963 drama films
Category:Spanish-language drama films
Category:Films scored by Astor Piazzolla |
Paula cautiva | Table of Content | Unreferenced, Cast, External links |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Row of Icicle | [[Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Row of Icicle | Row of Icicle
thumb|200px|Row of Icicles on a roof
ReasonWonderful picture that I saw on the article ice.
Articles this image appears inIce
CreatorUser:Digon3
Nominator Tomer T
Support — Tomer T 20:47, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
Oppose -Nelro
strong oppose - tilted, grainy, out of focus, and the subject, the icicles, are low contrast. Debivort 21:14, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
Oppose - It's a very bad image compared to the other images of User:Digon3. Per above.
Oppose Pic is tilted - Adrian Pingstone 15:45, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
Comment - It's very hard to get a high contrast picture of icicles, due to weather conditions; I know this from experience. I'd support an untilted version of this picture - of course part of the edges would have to be clipped. Mrug2 19:22, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
"Most interesting" pictures on Flickr; Free licence only. ~ trialsanderrors 01:10, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
Oppose This picture was taken before I got into photography. Its tilted and out of focus. --Digon3 22:24, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
I will upload a untilted version sometime soon. --Digon3 22:27, 12 March 2007 (UTC)
MER-C 08:44, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
Category:Featured picture nominations Category:Featured picture nominations/March 2007 |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Row of Icicle | Table of Content | [[Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Row of Icicle |
Lucía | About | Lucía is a 1968 Cuban black-and-white drama film directed by Humberto Solás, and written by Solás, Julio García Espinosa and Nelson Rodríguez. It was the winner of the Golden Prize and the Prix FIPRESCI at the 6th Moscow International Film Festival in 1969.
The film is a period piece, told in three stories in different moments of Cuban history (the Cuban war of independence, the 1930s during the regime of Gerardo Machado and the 1960s), all as seen through the eyes of a different woman, each named Lucía.
Lucia was digitally restored by the Cineteca di Bologna with funding from World Cinema Project and Turner Classic Movies and later screened at the Cannes Classics section of the 70th Cannes Film Festival in May 2017. The restored version also screened at the 55th New York Film Festival in the revivals section. |
Lucía | Plot | Plot |
Lucía | 1895 | 1895
The wealthy Lucía Fidelina lives with her mother in Havana. One day, she is passed by Rafael at church and the two gradually begin a relationship. Lucía's brother, Felipe, is a guerilla fighter in the Cuban war of independence hiding out at a coffee plantation. Visiting for one night, Lucía informs her brother of her happiness.
But she is heartbroken when, later, she receives a letter from Rafael's wife in Spain. Meeting with her later, Rafael confesses that though he has a wife and son in Spain, he is solely in love with her, and they make love secretly in a refinery. Wishing to run away from the city, Lucía suggests the coffee plantation her brother is hidden at, and reveals its location to Rafael. A beggar woman who has been frequently harassed by the city's populace warns her to not go with Rafael, but is brushed off.
Later, a full-scale assault is led on the plantation. Lucía is present and when Rafael spots her, he rides away. The casualties from the battle include her brother, Felipe, and Lucía returns to the city. Finding Rafael with a group of officers in the city plaza, she stabs him to death and is comforted by the beggar woman. |
Lucía | 1932 | 1932
Lucía Nuñez and her mother are sent by her father to a house in the Keys to escape riots in Cienfuegos. Lucía is bored in the Keys and generally annoyed with the pettiness of her mother. One night, she spots a group helping an injured man. She later meets the injured man, Aldo, a member of the ABC, and begins to fall in love.
Lucía and her mother return to Cuba, where she reunites with Aldo, and they begin dating. She begins working to support his revolutionary activities, and writes anti-Machado slogans with a coworker in their workplace bathroom. Aldo and his two revolutionary friends assassinate several drunken soldiers in a theater, meanwhile an anti-Machado protest Lucía and Flora take part in is violently broken up by police.
The group awakens to the news that Machado has resigned, and Aldo begins clerical work in Havana in forming a new provincial government. Aldo is disgusted by Havana's bourgeoise, but is elated when he finds out Lucía is pregnant. After a night of drinking with Antonio and Flora, Aldo reveals his dissatisfaction with the revolution and Antonio agrees. Aldo is later killed in another shootout and Lucía identifies the body. Now alone, she is left to contemplate her future. |
Lucía | 1961 | 1961
Lucía is a worker on a large compound run by a worker cooperative. One day, she is picked up by a man, Tomás, in his truck, and the two quickly marry, spending much of their time indoors for their honeymoon. Despite the revolution, Tomás is more traditionally minded and forbids Lucía from working any longer. Attending a party at the compound, Tomás gets into a fight with a man dancing with Lucía and proceeds to board up their home to prevent her from leaving.
The worker's cooperative announces that the Cuban government is sending literacy workers from Havana to the worksite to educate everyone. One arrives at Tomás's house to teach Lucía to read and write, and though resistant, Tomás is forced to allow him to do so. While teaching Lucía, the literacy worker picks up on the abusive relationship, and begins convincing Lucía to leave. After Tomás fights the literacy worker, Lucía seeks the help of Angelina, who devises a plan for her to escape.
Returning home drunk, Tomás finds that she has left and quickly goes to find her. Discovering her working at a salt flat, he chases her but is apprehended by the other workers.
Later as a town drunk, Tomás is approached by Lucía on a beach, who wishes to reconcile but only if he lets her work again. They argue and Tomás chases after her while a little girl laughs at them from a distance. |
Lucía | Cast | Cast |
Lucía | Part 1: Cuban War of Independence | Part 1: Cuban War of Independence
Raquel Revuelta as Lucía
Eduardo Moure as Rafael |
Lucía | Part 2: the 1930s | Part 2: the 1930s
Eslinda Núñez as Lucía
Ramón Brito as Aldo |
Lucía | Part 3: the 1960s | Part 3: the 1960s
Adela Legrá as Lucía
Adolfo Llauradó as Tomas |
Lucía | References | References |
Lucía | External links | External links
Lucia. Struggles with History
Category:1968 films
Category:1968 drama films
Category:Cuban black-and-white films
Category:Films directed by Humberto Solás
Category:Films set in the 1890s
Category:Films set in the 1930s
Category:Films set in the 1960s
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Anthology films
Category:Cuban drama films
Category:Spanish-language drama films
Category:Films scored by Leo Brouwer |
Lucía | Table of Content | About, Plot, 1895, 1932, 1961, Cast, Part 1: Cuban War of Independence, Part 2: the 1930s, Part 3: the 1960s, References, External links |
Digby Fairweather | short description | Richard John Charles "Digby" Fairweather (born 25 April 1946) is a British jazz cornetist, author and broadcaster. |
Digby Fairweather | Biography | Biography
Before becoming a professional musician, Fairweather was a librarian and has retained an interest in jazz bibliography and archiving.
He led his first band, Dig's Half Dozen, in 1971 and recorded in 1973 with Alex Welsh. Four years later, he was a member of the band Velvet, with Ike Isaacs, Len Skeat, and Denny Wright, then a member of the Midnite Follies Orchestra and the Pizza Express All-Stars. In the early 1980s, he started a band that performed music by Nat Gonella. He worked as a sideman for George Chisholm, Alex Welsh, Tiny Winters, and Brian Priestley. In the 1980s and 1990s, he led the Jazz Superkings, the Great British Jazz Band, and the Half Dozen. During the 1990s, he was part of the Salute to Satchmo. Fairweather and Stan Barker started the Jazz College charity to introduce improvisation in schools. He established the Association of British Jazz Musicians, The Jazz Centre UK and the National Jazz Archive. He wrote Jazz: The Essential Companion (1987) with Brian Priestley and Ian Carr. In 2000 it was renamed The Rough Guide to Jazz.
Fairweather's musical style has been influenced by Louis Armstrong, Ruby Braff, Billy Butterfield, Bobby Hackett, Red Nichols, and Gonella. Digby's Half Dozen toured and recorded with singer George Melly in the later years of his career (2003–2007). Fairweather's band toured with singer Paul Jones in their presentation Rocking in Rhythm in 2007.
Apart from his playing and group leading, Fairweather has long pursued a parallel career as a jazz broadcaster and writer. From 1985 to 1988, he worked and recorded with Brian Priestley's Special Septet and Tony Milliner's Mingus Music, and wrote the book How to Play Trumpet. By 1990 he had embarked on a dual vocation as broadcaster for BFBS, BBC World Service, Jazz FM (1991–92) and BBC Radios 2 and 3 (1992–98), including occasionally deputising for Humphrey Lyttelton on his show Best of Jazz and successively presenting Jazz Parade and Jazz Notes.
In 2016, Fairweather founded The Jazz Centre UK, a registered charity (no. 1167421) whose aim is to promote, preserve and celebrate the culture of jazz in all its forms. |
Digby Fairweather | Awards and honors | Awards and honors
Musician of the Year, BBC Jazz Society, 1979
Freedom, City of London, 1992
British Jazz Award (trumpet), 1992
Benno Haussmann Award, Cork Jazz Festival, 1993
Freedom of Southend on Sea, Millennium Role of Honour, 2000
Top Small Group (Digby's Half Dozen), British Jazz Awards, 2005, 2006, 2008–2015
Lifetime Achievement Award for Services to Jazz, Worshipful Company of Musicians London, 2013
Services to British Jazz, British Jazz Awards, 2015 |
Digby Fairweather | Discography | Discography |
Digby Fairweather | As leader/co-leader | As leader/co-leader
Havin' Fun (Black Lion, 1979)
Going Out Stepping (Black Lion, 1979)
Songs for Sandy (Hep, 1981)
Anytime, Any Place, Anywhere (Hep, 1982)
A Portrait of Digby Fairweather (Black Lion, 1991)
Mick Potts Tribute Concert (Flat Five, 1993)
Squeezin' the Blues Away with Tony Compton (FMR, 1994)
The Quality of Mercer (with Susannah McCorkle, Keith Ingham (Jazz Alliance, 1996)
Twelve Feet Off the Ground (Flat Five, 1998)
Singing and Swinging the Blues with George Melly (Robinwood Productions, 2003)
Things Ain't What They Used to Be (Robinwood, 2003)
The Ultimate Melly (Candid, 2006)
Two Part Conversations with Craig Milverton (Raymersound, 2006)
Partners in Time with Pete Strange (Rose Cottage, 2006)
Farewell Blues with George Melly (Lake, 2007)
Jazz at the Stone Hall with Dave Claridge (Rose Cottage, 2009)
Crackerbarrel Music (Hainault, 2011)
To Frederick with Affection (Rose Cottage, 2012) |
Digby Fairweather | Publications | Publications
Ace of Clubs: A Celebration of the 100 Club, foreword by Jools Holland, Edited by Digby Fairweather, 2021, ISBN 9781858587288 |
Digby Fairweather | References | References |
Digby Fairweather | External links | External links
Official site
Category:1946 births
Category:Living people
Category:British jazz horn players
Category:People from Rochford
Category:People from Southend-on-Sea
Category:Hep Records artists
Category:Black Lion Records artists
Category:Midnite Follies Orchestra members |
Digby Fairweather | Table of Content | short description, Biography, Awards and honors, Discography, As leader/co-leader, Publications, References, External links |
Pike Creek Bypass | # | redirect Ontario Highway 39 |
Pike Creek Bypass | Table of Content | # |
La Boda (1964 film) | short description | La Boda is a 1964 Argentine film directed by Lucas Demare from the novel by :es:Ángel María de Lera. It depicts Luciano, a middle-aged social outcast who has made his fortune in the slave trade, and his efforts to woo the young and beautiful Iluminades and win over her parents and other townspeople with his money.Cine argentino: modernidad y vanguardias, 1957/1983 |
La Boda (1964 film) | Cast | Cast
Manuel Alexandre
Mercedes Barranco
Conchita Bautista |
La Boda (1964 film) | References | References |
La Boda (1964 film) | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Films directed by Lucas Demare
Category:Argentine drama films
Category:1960s Argentine films
Category:1964 drama films
Category:Spanish-language drama films |
La Boda (1964 film) | Table of Content | short description, Cast, References, External links |
The Clan Club | short description | The Clan Club (El club del clan) is a 1964 Argentine film directed by Enrique Carreras. |
The Clan Club | Cast | Cast
Cachita Galán
Palito Ortega
Violeta Rivas
Johny Tedesco
Jolly Land |
The Clan Club | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:1960s Argentine films
Category:Films directed by Enrique Carreras |
The Clan Club | Table of Content | short description, Cast, External links |
Mrs. John L. Strong | Refimprove | Mrs. John L. Strong is a privately held American luxury company and manufacturer of custom papers and stationery. Founded in 1929 by Mrs. John L. (Flora) Strong, the company has created papers and custom luxury products for seven presidential families, royal houses, prominent members of international society, film stars and celebrities.
Mrs. Strong offers hand-engraving to its clients. Mrs. Strong's bespoke products display a range of crafts which are rarely used by others in the industry, including hand engraving of dies in steel, hand-stamping of dies, hand-mixing of custom varnish inks, hand-beveling and bordering, and hand-lining of envelopes. Mrs. Strong creates its own 100% cotton archival quality papers in its signature color "Strong's Vanilla" based on Mrs. Strong's original formulas. |
Mrs. John L. Strong | History | History
Mrs. John L. Strong (née Flora Feldstein) established her eponymous firm in the aftermath of the stock market crash of 1929. Joining forces with her sister, the owner of a luxury trousseau shop called Bournefield Linens, Mrs. Strong began selling wedding and social papers to New York's elite from Bournefield's location at 57th Street and Fifth Avenue.
Mrs. Strong's business soon outstripped the space at Bournefield, and she moved her location twice, first to 714 Madison Avenue, and later to the landmark 699 Madison Avenue, originally built as a New York home for the firm Fortnum & Mason, where the firm remains with a fifth floor atelier for private clients and a duplex ground floor boutique.
Mrs. Strong joined the "Street of Shops" on the first floor at Henri Bendel's in the 1950s. Mrs. Strong also sold through Gump's Department store in San Francisco. From her locations Mrs. Strong created papers for the Duke of Windsor and Wallis, The Duchess of Windsor, Barbara Hutton, the Rockefeller, Astor, Vanderbilt, and DuPont families, as well as Bette Davis, Diana Vreeland, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, Barbara Paley, and other icons of style.
After the death of Mrs. Strong in 1979, the firm was sold by Strong's heirs to Robert and Joy Lewis.
In 2002, the company was purchased by financier Jeffrey Lubin and his wife, designer Nannette Brown.
On May 21, 2009, Nannette Brown announced that she would close the business.https://www.nymag.com/daily/fashion/2009/05/mrs_john_l_strong_closing_mark.html New York Magazine: Mrs John L Strong's Closing Marks a Sad Day for Luxury On September 29, 2009, Crain's New York Business reported that the brand had been purchased in an auction (after filing for Chapter 11 protection in the Southern District of New York in August) by Houston-based private equity firm J.P. Kotts & Co. |
Mrs. John L. Strong | Sources | Sources
Flora Strong, Born 28 July 1896, died New York March, 1979.
Source: Social Security Death Index, http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Bush, and Clinton, Source: MJLS Archives, NYC
Papers have been made for members of the Royal Houses of Great Britain, Greece, and Jordan, as well as various Princely Houses. Source: MJLS Archives, NYC
Vogue, Conde Nast Publications, May 2006
AIA Guide to New York
Category:Privately held companies based in New York (state)
Category:Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2009
Category:Design companies established in 1929
Category:1929 establishments in New York City |
Mrs. John L. Strong | Table of Content | Refimprove, History, Sources |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | Short description | Eupatorium perfoliatum, known as common boneset or just boneset, is a North American perennial plant in the family Asteraceae. It is a common native to the Eastern United States and Canada, widespread from Nova Scotia to Florida, west as far as Texas, Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Manitoba. It is also called agueweed, feverwort, or sweating-plant. In herbal medicine, the plant is a diaphoretic, or an agent to cause sweating. It was introduced to American colonists by natives who used the plant for breaking fevers by means of heavy sweating, and commonly used to treat fever by the African-American population of the southern United States. The name "boneset" comes from the use of the plant to treat dengue fever, which is also called "break-bone fever." It is nearly always found in low, wet areas. |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | Description | Description
thumb|right|E. perfoliatum can be recognized from its perfoliate leaves
Eupatorium perfoliatum grows up to tall, with opposite, serrate leaves that clasp the stems (perfoliate). The stem is hairy. The plant produces dense clusters of tiny white flower heads held above the foliage. In Illinois, the plant blooms during late summer and early fall. Its native habitats include damp prairies, bogs, and alluvial woods.
Eupatorium perfoliatum can form hybrids with other species of the genus Eupatorium, for example Eupatorium serotinum. |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | Phytochemistry and safety | Phytochemistry and safety
Eupatorium perfoliatum leaves and roots contain mixed phytochemicals, including polysaccharides (containing xylose and glucuronic acid), tannins, volatile oil, sesquiterpene lactones, sterols, triterpenes, alkaloids, and various flavonoids, such as quercetin, kaempferol, and caffeic acid derivatives. E. perfoliatum and several of its related species are listed on the Poisonous Plants Database of the US Food and Drug Administration, with E. perfoliatum described as an "unapproved homeopathic medicine" with unknown safety by the US National Library of Medicine.
Holistic health companies marketing fraudulent supplement products that contained E. perforliatum with claims of benefit against COVID-19 were warned by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2020 about making illegal health claims and scamming consumers from their money. |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | Traditional medicine | Traditional medicine
Eupatorium perfoliatum (also called boneset) was used in traditional medicine by Native Americans who applied extracts for fever and common colds. By the early 20th century, it was reported as commonly used by rural African-Americans in the Deep South to treat fever, including dengue fever, though it was considered less effective for yellow fever and typhoid fever. Possible effects of E. perfoliatum for these uses remain undefined by adequate scientific research, and are unconfirmed by high-quality clinical research. If consumed in large amounts, tea made from its leaves may cause diarrhea. |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | References | References |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | External links | External links
perfoliatum
Category:Plants described in 1753
Category:Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus
Category:Butterfly food plants
Category:Medicinal plants of North America
Category:Flora of Northern America |
Eupatorium perfoliatum | Table of Content | Short description, Description, Phytochemistry and safety, Traditional medicine, References, External links |
Category:Publications established in 1912 | Category series navigation | Category:1912 establishments
Parameter 1=year required!}}
1912 |
Category:Publications established in 1912 | Table of Content | Category series navigation |
The Cicada Is Not a Bug | more citations needed | The Cicada Is Not a Bug (, US title The Games Men Play) is a 1963 Argentine drama film directed by Daniel Tinayre. It was entered into the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival. |
The Cicada Is Not a Bug | Cast | Cast
Amelia Bence
Elsa Daniel
Mirtha Legrand
Malvina Pastorino
José Cibrián
Narciso Ibáñez Menta
Ángel Magaña
Luis Sandrini
Enrique Serrano
Guillermo Bredeston
Myriam de Urquijo
Héctor Calcaño
Miguel Ligero
Oscar Valicelli
Lucio Deval
Julio De Grazia
Teresa Blasco
Diana Ingro
Leda Zanda |
The Cicada Is Not a Bug | References | References |
The Cicada Is Not a Bug | External links | External links
Category:1963 films
Category:1963 drama films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Films directed by Daniel Tinayre
Category:1960s Argentine films |
The Cicada Is Not a Bug | Table of Content | more citations needed, Cast, References, External links |
Demon in the Blood | Infobox film
| Demon in the Blood () is a 1964 Argentine film directed by René Mugica. |
Demon in the Blood | Cast | Cast |
Demon in the Blood | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Argentine horror films
Category:Films directed by René Múgica
Category:1960s Argentine films |
Demon in the Blood | Table of Content | Infobox film
, Cast, External links |
File:Adventures of the black stallion.jpg | Summary | Summary |
File:Adventures of the black stallion.jpg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Adventures of the black stallion.jpg | Table of Content | Summary, Licensing |
Circe (film) | short description | Circe is a 1964 Argentine film directed by Manuel Antín. It was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival.
The film is based on a short story by Julio Cortázar, published in 1951. Its main theme is about perverse sexual gratification in a repressed Catholic environment. Delia Mañara is notorious in her quarter of Buenos Aires for the mysterious deaths of two of her fiancés. She lives in a twilight world and gains most satisfaction through the exercise of power over others. It emerges that she killed the two men by poisoning them with the sweets she makes; when this fails with her third fiancé, he is freed from her fatal attraction by the knowledge.The mythical correspondences are explored by Sophie Dufays in Circé de Cortázar : au carrefour du mythe et du fantastique, Folia Electronica Classica, B Louvain-la-Neuve 2007, Numéro 13 |
Circe (film) | Cast | Cast |
Circe (film) | References | References |
Circe (film) | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Films directed by Manuel Antín
Category:Films based on works by Julio Cortázar
Category:Films based on short fiction
Category:1960s Argentine films |
Circe (film) | Table of Content | short description, Cast, References, External links |
Disloque en Mar del Plata | Infobox film
| Disloque en Mar del Plata (English: Chaos in Mar del Plata) is a 1964 Argentine film, directed by Conrado Diana. |
Disloque en Mar del Plata | Cast | Cast
Délfor
Jorge Porcel
Calígula
Mengueche
Belinda
Isabel Lainer
Vicente La Russa
Carlos Ferreyra
Anita Almada
Ámbar La Fox
Alejandro Maurín
René Oliver
Raúl Rossi
Ernesto Báez |
Disloque en Mar del Plata | References | References |
Disloque en Mar del Plata | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Films shot in Mar del Plata
Category:1960s Argentine films |
Disloque en Mar del Plata | Table of Content | Infobox film
, Cast, References, External links |
Portal:Biography/Selected anniversaries/March 8 | <div style="float:right;left-padding:.9em;">
[[Image:Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr circa 1930-edit.jpg | 100 px |
Portal:Biography/Selected anniversaries/March 8 | Births | Births
1841 - Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., U.S. Supreme Court Justice (d. 1935) (pictured)
1921 - Alan Hale, Jr., American actor (d. 1990)
1922 - Cyd Charisse, American actress and dancer (d. 2008)
1943 - Lynn Redgrave, English actress (d. 2010)
1976 - Freddie Prinze Jr., American actor |
Portal:Biography/Selected anniversaries/March 8 | Deaths | Deaths
1874 - Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States (b. 1800)
1887 - Henry Ward Beecher, American clergyman (b. 1813)
1930 - William Howard Taft, President of the United States (b. 1857)
1999 - Joe DiMaggio, American baseball player (b. 1914) |
Portal:Biography/Selected anniversaries/March 8 | Table of Content | <div style="float:right;left-padding:.9em;">
[[Image:Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr circa 1930-edit.jpg, Births, Deaths |
Cuidado con las colas | short description | Cuidado con las colas is a 1964 Argentine film directed by Julio Saraceni and starring Juan Carlos Thorry and Ambar La Fox. |
Cuidado con las colas | Cast | Cast
Juan Carlos Thorry
Ambar La Fox
Beba Bidart
Enrique Serrano
Julia Sandoval
Fernando Siro
Beatriz Taibo
Vicente Rubino
Paulette Christian
Lalo Hartich
Joe Rígoli
María Armand
Zulema Esperanza
Zulma Grey
Ricardo Quinteros
Lucio Deval
Ricardo Jordán
Osvaldo Castro |
Cuidado con las colas | References | References |
Cuidado con las colas | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:Films directed by Julio Saraceni
Category:1960s Argentine films |
Cuidado con las colas | Table of Content | short description, Cast, References, External links |
The Escaped | short description | The Escaped () is a 1964 Argentine drama film directed by Enrique Carreras. It won the Silver Condor Award for Best Film and was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival. |
The Escaped | Cast | Cast
Juan Carlos Altavista
Alberto Barcel as Médico
Guillermo Battaglia
Tita Merello
Mario Passano
Sergio Renán
Carlos Rivas as Locutor de TV
Jorge Salcedo
Walter Vidarte |
The Escaped | External links | External links
Category:1964 films
Category:1960s Spanish-language films
Category:Argentine black-and-white films
Category:1964 drama films
Category:Films directed by Enrique Carreras
Category:1960s Argentine films |
The Escaped | Table of Content | short description, Cast, External links |
La Leona (film) | Infobox film
| thumb|Isabel Sarli and Armando Bó
La Leona is a 1964 Argentine film directed by and starring Armando Bó with Isabel Sarli. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.