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There was a Sunshine Boy feature in the Sun as well, further on in each daily paper. This feature was discontinued in 2006. Sunshine Girl Magazine is a men's magazine published from Miami, Florida, US, derived from the Sun ' s annual Sunshine Girl calendar.
Sunshine Girl or Sunshine Girls may refer to: Sunshine Girl, the pinup section in the Sun chain of newspapers in Canada "Sunshine Girl" (Herman's Hermits song), a 1968 song by the Herman's Hermits "Sunshine Girl" (Moumoon song), a 2010 song by the Japanese band Moumoon; The Sunshine Girl, a 1912 West End musical comedy; Günther (singer), who ...
The Jamaica national netball team, commonly known as the Sunshine Girls, represent Jamaica in international netball competitions. Netball is the number one women's sport and the number one team sport in Jamaica, and the majority of the schools in Jamaica participate. [1]
Like many things in life, Julianna Margulies couldn’t have predicted where her memoir, “Sunshine Girl,” would take her. When she began writing, she thought she was penning a book on set ...
Film critic Nathan Rabin coined the term in 2007 in his review of the 2005 film Elizabethtown for The A.V. Club.In discussing Kirsten Dunst's character, he said "Dunst embodies a character type I like to call The Manic Pixie Dream Girl", a character who "exists solely in the fevered imaginations of sensitive writer-directors to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its ...
The Tillers performed as resident dancers at the Folies Bergère in Paris, the London Palladium, the Palace Theatres in Manchester and in London (as the Palace Girls or Sunshine Girls), the Blackpool Winter Gardens, on New York's Broadway, where Tiller had a dance school, and at hundreds of other theatres throughout Europe and the United States ...
The Sunshine Girl is an Edwardian musical comedy in two acts with a book by Paul A. Rubens and Cecil Raleigh, lyrics and music by Rubens and additional lyrics by Arthur Wimperis. The story involves a working girl who falls in love with the heir to the factory.
The term is commonly used to describe male actors and characters who tend to fall into two "babygirl" camps: soft-spoken men who possess traditionally feminine traits, and middle-aged antiheroes.