Highlights
A collection of news and information related to Sarah Bernhardt published by Tribune Company sources.
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Warhol's 10 prominent Jews
ehulme@am-ny.comInspired by Andy Warhol's earlier portrait of Israeli prime minister Golda Meir, Israeli art dealer Alexander Harari in 1978 approached gallerist Ronald Feldman, (who commissioned the original,) to ask if Warhol would be interested in making a series of...Tags: Photography, Gertrude Stein, Franz Kafka, Albert Einstein, Andy Warhol
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Breaking on through to the other side . . .
Special to the sentinelIt was a gray winter's day in Paris in February 2007. The weather seemed to suggest a trip to a cemetery. As much time as we spend in Paris, my husband, Skip, and I had never visited P�re-Lachaise Cemetery. With daughter Sarah along, on a short...Tags: Edith Piaf, Gertrude Stein, Death and Dying, Marcel Marceau, Frederic Chopin
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An immortal detective gives life to 'New Amsterdam'
diane.werts@newsday.comNEW AMSTERDAM. A cop called Amsterdam works as a current-day New York homicide detective, despite being killed 400 years ago in the city of that name. He's immortal! (And lovesick.) NYC-filmed drama series previews tonight and Thursday night at 9, moves...Tags: Diseases, CBS Corp., Crimes, New York, Murder
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San Bernardino: Distinguished by foothills, French fries
Los Angeles Times Staff WriterSan Bernardino may not be the Eden the early inhabitants stumbled upon, but the creeks and river are still inviting, and snowcapped mountains grace its backdoor in the wintertime. Sports and cultural events abound in this storied city where the McDonald...Tags: Clubs and Associations, Al Jolson, Natural Resources, Homes, Culture
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Legendary Mime Marcel Marceau Dies at 84
Special to The TimesMarcel Marceau, the great French mime who for seven decades mastered silence and brought new life to an ancient art form, has died. He was 84. Marceau died Saturday in Paris, French news media reported, citing his former assistant Emmanuel Vacca. The...Tags: Michael Jackson, Marcel Marceau, Charlie Chaplin, Newspapers, Red Skelton
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Paris fashion: a red hot winter
Associated PressParis designers looked to Hollywood with elaborate creations that will vie for "best dressed" on the red carpet. Cate Blanchett lit up the front row at Giorgio Armani's show, held on the third day of the autumn-winter haute couture collections. And...Tags: Luc Besson, Peter Greenaway, Claudia Schiffer, Television, Academy Awards
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Fall Arts: Art calendar
Critic's Picks
Mark Markov-Grinberg. Photographer Markov-Grinberg chronicled the dark and heady rise of the Soviet Union from the 1920s through the '40s. These were the years of Stalin's purges, of forced collectivization and mass industrialization. They...Tags: History, Tony Gonzalez, Margaret Bourke-White, Heckscher Museum of Art, Religious Leaders
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Quebec, where merry is made
Times Staff WriterSnowflakes dusted my nose as I stood in Place-Royale, the birthplace of French civilization in North America and, more recently, site of the arrest of Leonardo DiCaprio's con-man character in the 2002 film "Catch Me If You Can." In the movie, the ancient...Tags: Benedict Arnold, Restaurant and Catering Industry, Sales, Hotel and Accommodation Industry, Ella Fitzgerald
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Île hop: Who needs hip?
Times Staff WriterAt 6:30 on a pitch-dark morning early last October, I was backing a French rental car down a ramp from the dock at Le Palais on Belle-Île onto the ferry, my eyes frozen on an attendant who was waving his arms frantically and yelling. "À droit!" (To the...Tags: Tourism and Leisure, Transportation, Air France-KLM, Beach Vacations, Personal Service
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'Salome' steps up in its small space
Tribune arts criticMost of Oscar Wilde's famous plays are works of personal obfuscation. "Salome," the infamous tale of the revved-up young woman who danced for the pleasure of Herod and the head of John the Baptist, is a troubled drama of personal revelation. Given the...Tags: Rogers Park, Steven Berkoff, Religious Leaders, Janet Jackson, Baptist
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In Paris, death makes a holiday
Newsday Staff WriterFLOWERS, love letters and lipstick kisses by the hundreds - all so apropos of Paris, the world's capital of love and destination for romantics everywhere. But something was amiss. The scene was not a charming cafe, nor an elegant hotel room, nor a...Tags: Edith Piaf, Tourism and Leisure, Gertrude Stein, Minority Groups, Celebrity
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East Marion
Beginnings: The first inhabitants were the Orient Focus People, Indians who lived about 1000 BC. They vanished long before the arrival in about 900 AD of the Corchaugs, who called the area Poquatuc. The Corchaugs were still present when six English...Tags: National Government, Benedict Arnold, East Marion, Daniel Webster, Beach Vacations
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