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The Bridegroom's Dilemma (French: Le Coucher de la mariée ou Triste nuit de noces) was an 1899 French short silent comedy film by Georges Méliès. It was sold by Méliès's Star Film Company and is numbered 177–178 in its catalogues, where it is advertised as a scène comique .
"D'abord, c'est quoi l'amour" topped the Quebec chart for two weeks. It entered the chart on 17 October 1988 and stayed there twenty four weeks. The B-side of the single included the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest winner - " Ne partez pas sans moi ", an unreleased track in Canada.
The sentence repeated throughout the song "le dormeur doit se réveiller" is a sample from David Lynch's 1984 American epic science fiction film Dune.According to Elia Habib, an expert of French charts, "Le Dormeur" displays a "soaring atmosphere to the sound of saturated synthesizers and a cavernous voice cousin to that of Darth Vader", which allowed the song to have a great success in ...
Coucher de soleil no. 1 is an oil painting on canvas in a horizontal format with dimensions 72.5 cm × 100 cm (28.5 in × 39.4 in), signed J.Metzinger (lower right), and titled on the verso "Coucher de soleil no. 1". Also on the verso is another painting by Metzinger representing a river scene with ships.
All Saints' version features different, slightly racier lyrics for its verses, written by the group; the only lyrics retained from the original song are heard in the "gicchi-gicchi-ya-ya da-da" and "mocha-choca-latte ya-ya" (of the pre-chorus) and the French "Voulez-vous coucher avec moi ce soi" ("do you want to sleep with me tonight") of the ...
The Franco-Swiss Réveil was contemporary and analogous to the German Erweckungsbewegung and shared the social concern of its leaders like J. F. Oberlin.A preacher influenced by the Réveil was the German-speaking Swiss minister Samuel Heinrich Froehlich founder of the Neutäufer in Europe and the Apostolic Christian Church in the United States.
Les Troyens (pronounced [le tʁwajɛ̃]; in English: The Trojans) is a French grand opera in five acts, running for about five hours, [1] by Hector Berlioz. [2] The libretto was written by Berlioz himself from Virgil's epic poem the Aeneid; the score was composed between 1856 and 1858.
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