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The narrator then draws the audience's attention to Joseph's father Jacob and his 12 sons ("Jacob and Sons"). Jacob favours Joseph over his other sons, and he gives Joseph a multicoloured coat to show his affection for him. Joseph is ecstatic about this gift ("Joseph's Coat"), while his brothers look on with jealousy.
Joseph Had a Little Overcoat is a 1999 children’s picture book by Simms Taback that won the 2000 Caldecott Medal. [1] [2] The book is a re-illustrated version of a book of the same name by Taback that was published in 1977. [3] The protagonist is Joseph, a Jewish farmer, who has a little striped overcoat.
The jealousy of Joseph's brothers is only fulfilled by Joseph's interpretation of his own dreams that he is destined to rule over them. They try to kill Joseph, but decide to sell him into slavery instead. They smear his coat in goat's blood and tell Jacob that Joseph is dead. Meanwhile, Joseph is purchased by millionaire Potiphar in Egypt. As ...
Jacob explains why Joseph is precious to him and bestows the coat of many colors on him. As they depart to meet the strangers, Jacob tells Joseph to go with them, but Rachel begs him to stay close to Reuben. (Curtain) (Scene 2: The Wells of Dothan, afternoon) Joseph reaches the wells after Reuben has been decoyed away by Simeon.
The "Coat of Many Colors" on display at the Chasing Rainbows museum at Dollywood. The album's title track, "Coat of Many Colors", tells of how Parton's mother stitched together a coat for her daughter out of rags given to the family. As she sewed, she told her child the Biblical story of Joseph and his coat of many colors. The excited child ...
[6] [18] At first they operated under the name Cosmic Colors, but only produced one poster before changing the name to Jacob and the Coloured Coat, producing two more works. In March 1967 they chose the name Hapshash and the Coloured Coat, which suggested both hashish and psychedelic patterning (Joseph's "coat of many colors").
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Picture Pages is a 1978–1984 American educational television program aimed at preschool children, presented by Bill Cosby—teaching lessons on basic arithmetic, geometry, word association and drawing through a series of interactive lessons that used a workbook that viewers would follow along with the lesson.