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Sara Angelucci (born 1962), photography, video art; Raymonde April (born 1953), photographer and academic, awarded the Order of Canada for her contribution to photography; Joi Arcand (born 1982), nehiyaw photo-based artist; Barbara Astman (born 1950), hybrid photography and new media; Melissa Auf der Maur (born 1972), photographer and musician
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Although not immediately popular with critics, the film was a significant commercial success, making at least $2 million at the box office in its initial run. [4] Its success was part of a wave of films that reignited the commercial viability of the Cinema of Quebec, following a number of fallow years in the late 1960s. [5]
The agency also led the celebration in 2016 of the 100th Anniversary of Women's First Right to Vote in Canada. [7] Status of Women Canada' has led events like Women's History Month, International Day of the Girl, and October 18, the day that Women were officially recognized as legal persons, appropriately called Persons Day.
The Miss Canada Pageant obtained the franchise for the Miss Universe Pageant in 1978, when that year's first runner-up, Andrea Leslie Eng, competed internationally. From 1979 to the final 1992 contest before cancellation, the winners of Miss Canada went on to compete. Miss Canada 1982, Karen Baldwin, is the only Miss Canada to also win Miss ...
Four Women of Egypt (original French title Quatre femmes d'Égypte) is a 1997 Canadian-Egyptian documentary film by Tahani Rached. The film revolves around four female friends from Egypt with opposing religious, social, and political views in modern-day Egypt. The film was highly acclaimed and won several awards in documentary film festivals. [1]
X Femmes (English: X Women) is a French television series of short films shown on Canal+ in 2008–2009. [1] They were shot by female directors with the goal of producing erotica , soft-core pornography and hard-core pornography from a female point of view.
Women (French: Les Femmes; U.S.: The Vixen) is a 1969 sex comedy film co-written and directed by Jean Aurel, starring Brigitte Bardot and Maurice Ronet. It recorded admissions of 505,292 in France. [1]