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Fortune Is a Woman (U.S. title: She Played With Fire [1]) is a 1957 black and white British-American film noir crime film directed by Sidney Gilliat and starring Jack Hawkins and Arlene Dahl. [2] The screenplay was by Gilliat and Frank Launder , from an adaptation by Val Valentine of the 1952 novel Fortune is a Woman by Winston Graham . [ 3 ]
Fire (Beatriz Da Costa) is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. First created as Green Fury, Beatriz Da Costa is the first Latin American female superhero in mainstream American comics. She is the fourth Latin American superhero, after El Gaucho (DC), White Tiger (Marvel), and Bushmaster (DC). [1]
Portrait of Madame Cézanne was exhibited along with works such as Man with Folded Arms at Lichtentein's first Pop exhibition in Los Angeles. [1] The linear twice-removed black-and-white (along with Man with Folded Arms) is regarded as a quotation of Erle Loran's outline diagram of Cézanne's compositional methods [2] published in a diagram book called Cézanne's Composition. [3]
A traditional silhouette portrait of the late 18th century. A silhouette (English: / ˌ s ɪ l u ˈ ɛ t /, [1] French:) is the image of a person, animal, object or scene represented as a solid shape of a single colour, usually black, with its edges matching the outline of the subject.
The photograph, widely known as Disaster Girl, depicts a young girl staring into the camera while a building burns behind her. Disaster Girl is a meme photograph featuring a young girl staring at the camera with a structure fire behind her. [1] [2] [3] The girl in the photo, Zoë Roth, was four years old when the photo was taken in 2005. [4]
Ice's personality is a mix of girl-next-door wholesomeness and innocent-abroad naiveté, which served as a contrast to the impulsive, libidinous traits of her friend and teammate Fire. The two change their names from Green Flame and Icemaiden to Fire and Ice. [ 4 ]
The gun barrel sequence as it appears in Dr.No (1962). The gun barrel sequence is a signature device featured in nearly every James Bond film. [1] Shot from the point of view of a presumed assassin, it features James Bond walking in from the right side of the screen until he reaches the center, turning, and then shooting directly at the camera, causing blood to run down the screen.
Molly Williams (fl. 1818) was the first known female, and first known black, firefighter in the United States. [1] An African American, she was a slave [2] of the New York City merchant Benjamin Aymar. She was affiliated with the Oceanus Engine Company #11 in lower Manhattan. During her time in the company, she was called Volunteer No. 11. [3]