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  2. Sans Souci Cabaret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sans_Souci_Cabaret

    Remodeling of the Sans Souci Cabaret started in 1955 at an approximate cost of one million dollars. The management of Norman “Roughneck” Rothman, a mafia associate who was married to the Cuban Olga Chaviano, a star at the Sans Souci between 1953 and 1955, preceded the management of William G. Buschoff, known as Lefty Clark, from Miami Beach ...

  3. Sanssouci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanssouci

    The palace's name is a French phrase (sans souci) meaning "without worries" or "carefree", emphasising that the palace was meant as a place of relaxation rather than a seat of power. Sanssouci is little more than a large, single-storey villa—more like the Château de Marly than Versailles.

  4. Festo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Festo

    Festo is known for making moving robots that move like animals, such as the seagull-like SmartBird, jellyfish, butterflies and the BionicKangaroo. [2] In 2018 they also added a flying fox and a rolling spider to the list. [3] Festo calls their Bionic Flying Fox an “ultra-lightweight flying object with intelligent kinematics.” [citation needed]

  5. Sans Souci Theatre (Calcutta) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sans_Souci_Theatre_(Calcutta)

    The Sans Souci Theatre never really recuperated after the death of Esther Leach, and it was forced to close in 1849. While British theatre companies often visited Calcutta on tours to India, there was no new British theatre founded in Caclutta to replace the Sans Souci Theatre the years after its closure, and the theatre audience took to visit the performances of the school theatres of the ...

  6. Carel Anton Fodor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carel_Anton_Fodor

    Carel Anton Fodor or Carolus Antonius Fodor (12 April 1768 – 22 February 1846) was a Dutch pianist, conductor, and the most prominent composer of his generation in the Netherlands, writing in the manner of Joseph Haydn.

  7. Emery J. San Souci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emery_J._San_Souci

    San Souci was born in Saco, Maine, [1] the son of Euzebe San Souci and Marie Louise (Couett) San Souci. [2] As a small child he moved with his family in 1860 to St. Albans, Vermont. His father was a member of the Army of the Potomac and was killed in battle in 1864. [3] San Succi attended school in St. Albans until he was eleven. [4]

  8. Sanssouci at the time of Frederick William IV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanssouci_at_the_time_of...

    Frederick William IV. Sanssouci at the time of Frederick William IV covers the period almost one hundred years after the palace's construction, when a King who was convinced of the divine right of his crown and of the absolute claim to power of the ruler came to the Prussian throne.

  9. Sans Souci Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sans_Souci_Theatre

    The Sans Souci Theatre was a 500-seat theatre located on Leicester Place, just off Leicester Square in the City of Westminster It was built in 1796 by Charles Dibdin , and replaced eponymous former music rooms he had leased for performances, off the Strand .