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The Lonely Doll tells the story of a doll named Edith, who lives by herself until two teddy bears, called Mr. Bear and Little Bear, appear in her life. One day, Mr. Bear goes out for a walk leaving the two alone in the house; He returns to find they have rummaged in a closet for dress-up clothing, smeared themselves with makeup, and written "Mr. Bear is just a silly old thing" in lipstick on ...
Lenci Boy and girl dolls sitting together at the Judges' Lodgings, Lancaster. The bodies and clothing of Lenci boy and girl dolls are made of pressed woolen felt. The bodies were machine stitched up the back and across the shoulders then hand stitched between the legs. This allowed them to wear low cut tops and clothes that displayed their limbs.
The Doll’s defiant gaze seen in the photos of her arrest led locals to compare her to Rosario Tijeras, the titular character of a telenovela centered around a female assassin in Medellín.
Edith Flack Ackley Wengenroth (6 June 1887 – 28 November 1970) was an American writer and doll maker and designer. She was born in Greenport, New York. She made her first dolls for her daughter. [1] [2] When her daughter, Telka, was older she did water color paintings that were portraits of Ackley's dolls. [2]
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‘Koko Da Doll was the latest victim of violence against Black transgender women,’ documentary director D Smith said Koko Da Doll death: Trans woman from Sundance hit Kokomo City killed in ...
Auto-da-Fé is a one-act 1941 play by Tennessee Williams. The plot concerns a young postal worker, Eloi, whose sexuality is repressed by a rigidly moralistic mother. The plot concerns a young postal worker, Eloi, whose sexuality is repressed by a rigidly moralistic mother.
Auto da Fé (original title Die Blendung, "The Blinding") is a 1935 novel by Elias Canetti; the title of the English translation (by C. V. Wedgwood, Jonathan Cape, Ltd, 1946) refers to the burning of heretics by the Inquisition. The first American edition of Wedgwood's translation was titled The Tower of Babel (Alfred A. Knopf, 1947).