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When is the composer of song Any Old Port In A Storm 's birthday?
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Any Old Port in a Storm "Any Old Port in a Storm" is a popular song composed by Kerry Mills with lyrics by Arthur J. Lamb. Published in 1908, it has been recorded many times. The lyrics as published:
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"John Edmondson (musician) \"For the Australian WW2 Victoria Cross medal awardee see John Hurst Edmondson\" John B. Edmondson (born February 3, 1933; died, December 30, 2016) was an American professional trumpet player, pianist, music composer, former music teacher, and freelance writer (composer) and arranger. He is a member of ASCAP. He is listed on the international \"Who's Who in Music,\" and also composed Bunker Hill March.",
"Arthur Kent (songwriter) Arthur Kent (New York City July 2, 1920 - Florence, SC January 26, 2009) was an American composer of popular songs, many of which he wrote in collaboration with lyricist Sylvia Dee.",
"Henry Marsh (musician) Ian Henry Murray Marsh (born 8 December 1948) is an English musician and composer, best known as a member of the pop group Sailor. Marsh was born in Bath, Somerset. He was educated at Sherborne School and New College, Oxford. Marsh's first group was at school; Jeremy Irons was the drummer. After Oxford, Marsh joined a group with, among others, John G. Perry, at first called Toast, which expanded to become Gringo. He was invited in 1973 by Phil Pickett to join a group called Kajanus Pickett, after Pickett and Georg Kajanus. The group became Sailor with the inclusion of Grant Serpell. Sailor's original line-up split up in 1978, although Pickett and Marsh released more material as Sailor with Gavin and Virginia David in 1980, with an album of Pickett compositions called \"Dressed for Drowning\". After Sailor disbanded, he worked with Kajanus on DATA and \"And The Mamluks\", a short-lived electronic-music project. Marsh eventually teamed up with writer Barry Mason in 1986. They and David H. Bell, a Broadway director, wrote a musical called \"Malibu\", first performed in 1991. He wrote another musical, \"Casper—The Musical\", with Pickett in 1999. Marsh has written musical scores for theatre productions including \"Romeo and Juliet\", \"The Grapes of Wrath\" and \"The Dark at the Top of the Stairs\". He received the Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Original Music in Theater Production in 1998 for \"The Comedy of Errors\", and in 1999 for \"Much Ado About Nothing\". He also received a best composer nomination for \"As You Like It\" in 2002. In 2004 he was nominated for two Jefferson Awards for \"The Taming of the Shrew\" and \"A Midsummer Night's Dream\". His musical theatre work in the USA includes \"One Last Summer\", \"In Stitches\" and \"Female Problems\" for which he received a nomination for Best New Work. His musical theatre work in the UK includes \"The Mask\", \"Spider-Man\" and \"Casper\". Marsh has composed numerous scores for television.",
"Allister MacGillivray Allister MacGillivray CM, D. Litt (honors), is a Canadian singer/songwriter, guitarist, and music historian from the Cape Breton region of Nova Scotia. He was born January 17, 1948 in the coal-mining and fishing town of Glace Bay. He began performing at the age of seven, later became a boy chorister and, as a teen, sang in local folk bands. During his twenties and thirties, he traveled the world as a guitar accompanist with some prominent Celtic performers, including Ryan's Fancy, Makem & Clancy (Tommy Makem, Liam Clancy) and John Allan Cameron. With Cameron, he performed on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville in 1970, earning a lengthy standing ovation and stealing the show from the likes of Hank Snow, Roy Rogers, and Bill Monroe. Since leaving the road, MacGillivray has lived close to the village of Marion Bridge, also known as \"Drochaid Mhira\" which remains strongly Gaelic. A well-respected author/composer, his most popular songs include: \"Away From The Roll Of The Sea\", \"Coal Town Road\", \"Kitty Bawn O'Brien\", \"Tie Me Down\", \"Here's To Song\", \"Sea People\", and \"You'll Be Home Again\" — all published by Cabot Trail Music (SOCAN). He is best known for a composition called \"Song for the Mira\" that provided the theme as well as the sound track for an Atlantic Canadian film, \"Marion Bridge\". \"Song For the Mira\" has been translated into Italian, Dutch, French, Scots Gaelic, Japanese, and Mi' kmaq, is available on well over 300 recordings, and is a standard in the Canadian choral-music repertoire. One of the most recorded songs ever by an eastern Canadian writer, \"Out On The Mira\" (an alternate title) has been covered by Anne Murray, Foster & Allen, Celtic Thunder, Daniel O'Donnell, Denny Doherty (of The Mamas & The Papas), Noel Harrison, Phil Coulter, The Canadian Tenors, Frank Patterson, The Los Angeles Children's Chorus, and scores of other noted performers. In 2018, it was inducted into The Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame. In the mid-1970s, MacGillivray penned \"Coal Town Road\" for Fergus O'Byrne of Ryan's Fancy.",
"I'll Sail My Ship Alone \"I'll Sail My Ship Alone\" is a 1950 song written by Moon Mullican (sometimes credited as \"Morry Burns\"), Henry Bernard (sometimes credited as \"Henry Glover\"), Lois Mann (sometimes credited as \"Sydney Nathan\") and Henry Thurston, and popularized by Moon Mullican. The song was Mullican's most successful release, reaching number one on the \"Billboard\" Country & Western chart for a single week, and spending a total of nine months on that listing. \"I'll Sail My Ship Alone\" crossed over to the pop chart, reaching number 17.",
"Montego Bay (song) \"Montego Bay\" is a song co-written and performed by Bobby Bloom about the city in Jamaica of the same name. The song was a Top 10 hit for Bloom in the Fall of 1970 on both sides of the Atlantic. It reached #3 on the UK Singles Chart, #5 on the Canadian \"RPM 100\" Singles Chart, #7 on the Australian Go-Set Singles Chart and #8 on the US Billboard Hot 100. The song was co-written and produced by Jeff Barry. In the master tape of the song, Bloom breaks into a chorus of \"Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'\" at the end of the recording. The song features a whistler, as well as Jamaican instruments in a calypso style. Bloom's recording of the song appeared in the 1997 film \"The Ice Storm\". In January 1980, New Zealand recording artist Jon Stevens released a version as a single. It peaked at number 1 in New Zealand, knocking himself from the top of the charts. \"Montego Bay\" remained number 1 for seven weeks in 1980.",
"Ian Bell (musician) Ian Bell (born 1954) is a Canadian folk musician, composer, and singer-songwriter who has been active in the Canadian folk music scene since the 1970s. With Anne Lederman, he was part of the seminal Canadian folk group Muddy York. He has been the leader of The Dawnbreakers and Professor Chalaupka's Celebrated Singing School. Bell has performed at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival and the Mariposa Folk Festival, among others. He has contributed to the development and preservation of Canadian folk music for more than twenty-five years. He sings both old songs and his own original compositions. His music has a Celtic flavour. He is a versatile musician who plays several instruments. Bell spent most of his time as a part-time musician, also working in museums, the last being curator of the Port Dover Harbour Museum on Lake Erie. He left the museum in 2013 and has been working in music and art since. Bell was born in Simcoe, Ontario, grew up in Waterford, and lives now in Paris, Ontario. Some of his original songs evoke the landscape and history of southwestern Ontario. Bell's career includes composing and playing instrumental music, singing, songwriting, storytelling, artist in residence, director of music festivals, and working as a freelance broadcaster. His original songs have many themes: blacksmiths, bikers, Charles Atlas, woolly mammoths, fishermen, and love. His performances include his own stories: \"funny, touching, unlikely, mostly true, and always entertaining.\" Venues range from Roy Thomson Hall to barns and from the Glenn Gould Studio to rural church basements and art galleries. In 1978, Ian Bell, Kate Murphy, and Anne Lederman joined up to form Muddy York, to play the traditional songs and dance music of Canada, especially Ontario. The group's name, Muddy York, refers to an old epithet for Toronto. (See Name of Toronto.) They played in venues from church basements to barn dances to festivals, in Ontario and the western provinces. In 1982 Kate Murphy left the group but Bell and Lederman continued. They became well known and played at Expo 86 in Vancouver, BC. Bell has performed at the Edmonton Folk Festival (AB) and the Mariposa Folk Festival (ON) as well as festivals in Ottawa ON, Winnipeg MB, Owen Sound ON, Lunenberg NS, Montmagny, and Yellowknife NWT.",
"Robert A. King (composer) Robert A. King (September 20, 1862 – April 13, 1932) was a prolific early twentieth century American composer, who wrote under pen names including the pen names, Mary Earl, Robert A. Keiser, and Betty Chapin. Some authors believe that King wrote the song \"The Fountain in the Park\", credited to vaudevillian Ed Haley. In January 1903, King managed the Teachers' Department for Leo Feist Inc., one of Tin Pan Alley's music publishers. His first hit was ‘’Anona.’’ He collaborated musically with Ballard Macdonald, Billy Moll, Ted Fiorito, Howard Johnson, Gus Kahn, and Charley Straight. In 1918, King as Mary Earl composed \"Beautiful Ohio\" with lyrics by Ballard Macdonald. A chart topper during the year of its release, it sold more than five million copies for publisher Shapiro, Bernstein, & Company.",
"Old Brown's Daughter Old Brown's Daughter (Roud 1426) was an English music hall song, sung by Alfred Vance, and became a Newfoundland folk song. It was written by G. W. Hunt (c.1837–1904), circa 1878, although it is often wrongly credited to Johnny Burke (1851–1930). It was in the repertoire of English folk singer Walter Pardon on his 1975 album, A Proper Sort. Peter Bellamy also sang a version of Old Brown's Daughter on his 1975 self-titled album. In 1991, Damien Barber recorded the song for Fellside Records and it was released on the compilation Voices in 1992. The melody was rewritten by Newfoundland singer/songwriter Ron Hynes and Hynes' version was covered by Great Big Sea on their 1999 album, \"Turn\". The Roud Folk Song Index records that this song was issued as a broadside by a number of publishers. A copy published by Pearson of Manchester is in the Bodleian Ballad Collection.",
"Halsey K. Mohr Halsey K. Mohr (1883 – 1942) was an American composer and lyricist. Halsey Mohr was born in Canada in 1883 to a Canadian father and a mother from New York. He moved to the United States when he was age 13. In 1906, he married Helen Quarrels and they had two daughters named Edna and Shirley. He died on August 29, 1942, at age 59. Described as a \"songwriter and vaudeville song and dance man\" Mohr had a successful career as a composer and sometimes lyricist of usually comic songs in the vaudeville and tin pan alley tradition. Some of his more noted songs were \"Piney Ridge\", \"They're Wearing 'Em Higher In Hawaii\", \"Liberty Belle\", \"Jane Dear\", and \"I'm A Yiddish Cowboy\". Going against antiwar sentiment during the early years of World War I, he wrote pro-war patriotic music. His daughter Edna Mohr also went on to be a composer."
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"1 February 1869"
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Where was the mother of Murad Bakhsh born?
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Murad Bakhsh Muhammad Murad Bakhsh (), (9 October 1624 – 14 December 1661) was a Mughal prince and the youngest surviving son of Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and Empress Mumtaz Mahal. He was the Subedar of Balkh, till he was replaced by his elder brother Aurangzeb in the year 1647. Muhammad Murad Bakhsh was born on 9 October 1624, at the Rohtasgarh Fort in Bihar, as the sixth and youngest surviving son of Emperor Shah Jahan and his beloved wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Some historical records states that Murad was not the son of Shah Jahan , rather he was a son of Hindu courtier ( attending to Mumtaz) . Murad's siblings included his two politically powerful sisters, the princesses Jahanara Begum and Roshanara Begum, as well as the heir-apparent to his father, his eldest brother, Crown Prince Dara Shikoh and the future Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb. In 1638, Murad Bakhsh, at the age of fourteen years, married the Safavid princess, Sakina Banu Begum, daughter of Shah Nawaz Khan Safavi. She was the younger sister of his elder sister-in-law, Dilras Banu Begum, who was Aurangzeb's wife. He was appointed as the Subadar of Multan (1642), of Balkh (16 February 1646 to 9 August 1646), of Kashmir (20 August 1647 to July 1648), of Deccan (25 July 1648 to 14 September 1649), and Kabul (23 January 1650 to 1654), of Gujarat (March 1654), and Malwa. On 30 November 1657, he proclaimed himself emperor at Ahmedabad, after reports that his father was ill. During the same year, he received the Ottoman ambassador Manzada Husain Agha, who arrived in the port of Surat and was on his way to meet Shah Jahan in Agra. Manzada Husain Agha mentions his disappointment regarding the wars between Shah Jahan's sons. Murad Bakhsh joined hands with Aurangzeb to defeat Dara Shikhoh, the eldest son of Shah Jahan.
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"Murad Chishti railway station Murad Chishti railway station (, ) is located in Pakistan.",
"Bakhshi Varz Bakhshi Varz (, also Romanized as Bakshī Varz) is a village in Afrineh Rural District, Mamulan District, Pol-e Dokhtar County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 69, in 15 families.",
"Allah Bakhsh (painter) Ustad Allah Bakhsh ( 18 October 1978; sometimes spelled Allah Bux or Allah Bukhsh) was a Pakistani painter and calligrapher who was actively involved in aesthetics and classical landscape paintings throughout his life. He produced his work in British India before partition and in Pakistan after split of Indian subcontinent. Most of his work revolves around traditional tales of Persian and Hindu mythology. He also depicted rural life, particularly culture of Punjab, Pakistan in his paintings. The recipient of national literary award, the Pride of Performance in 1963, he is primarily recognized for depicting tragic love stories of Sohni Mahiwal, Heer Ranjha and Tilism-e-Hoshruba, an epic story of Amir Hamza, a legendary Persian adventurer. Sometimes, he used to depict traditional festivals of Punjab. Some of his work he produced after independence was acquired by the National Art Gallery. He was born around 1895 in British India (in modern-day Wazirabad, Pakistan). He spent most of his life in Lahore. At first, he attended a Madrasa to study Urdu and Arabic, however, he subsequently left school. His father was a house painter who used to work at Mughalpura Railway Workshop. At the apparent age of five, he joined Master Abdullah who trained him in artwork. He was first asked to practice three English alphabets (ABC) on slate. It is believed he practiced letter \"A\" for the first three years, and later B and C letters to produce \"ABC of art\". He started his first artwork between 1913 and 1914 at Bhati Gate with nonrepresentational patterns. Initially, he copied Western painting to create visual characters, but later adopted original artwork with mythical subject. In 1914, he went to Bombay (now Mumbai) for a better career where he stayed for five years and worked at Roop Naraine Photographic Studio as a background artist. His initial efforts didn't help him to earn recognition. He later created paintings of Krishna, a major deity in Hinduism which helped him to be recognized as an artist. After practicing Punjabi folklore and Hindu mythology, he became known as a \"romantic painter\". The newspapers of that time referred to him as the \"master painter\". He moved back to Lahore in 1919 and worked as a commercial artist at Paisa Akhbar in Urdu Bazaar (Lahore) until 1922.",
"Lal Bakhsh Lal Bakhsh (born 4 November 1943) is a former Pakistani cyclist. He competed in the team pursuit event at the 1964 Summer Olympics.",
"Mowtowr-e Nur Mohammad Pandar Bakhsh Mowtowr-e Nur Mohammad Pandar Bakhsh (, also Romanized as Mowtowr-e Nūr Moḩammad Pandār Bakhsh) is a village in Jazmurian Rural District, Jazmurian District, Rudbar-e Jonubi County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 121, in 23 families.",
"Ab Bakhshan Ab Bakhshan () may refer to:",
"Mehrdasht Mehrdasht (; formerly, Mehrabad (), also Romanized as Mehrābād; also known as Mehr Abad Abarghoo, Mehrābād-e Abrqū, and Mihrābād) is a city in and capital of Bahman District, in Abarkuh County, Yazd Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 7,201, in 1,756 families.",
"Pichdeh, Nur Pichdeh (, also Romanized as Pīchdeh) is a village in Owzrud Rural District, Baladeh District, Nur County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16, in 7 families. It is the birthplace of Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi (Persian: میرزا حسین نوری طبرسی, Arabic: الميرزا حسين النوري الطبرسي) (1838 - 1902) popularly known as Muhaddis Noori who was a top Shi'a Islamic cleric and father of Islamic Shi'a Renaissance.",
"Khuda Bakhsh Sheikh Khuda Bakhsh (or Bux) Sheikh (, ) was an Urdu writer and poet from the Barabanki district of Uttar Pradesh, India. He published poetry in Arabic, Urdu and Persian. He followed a Sufi master, Waris Ali Shah, and wrote a book \"Tohmat-ul-Asfiya\" about him. In 1877 he published Shah's sayings as a book entitled \"Malfuzat-i-Haji Waris 'Ali Shah\".",
"Ardashir II (Bavandid ruler) Ardashir II () was the ruler of the Bavand dynasty from 1238 to 1249. His grandmother was a sister of Rustam V, and he was also related to the Nizari Ismaili Jalaluddin Hasan through his mother. In 1238, Ardashir restored Bavand rule in Mazandaran, and assumed the traditional Bavand title of \"ispahbadh\". He died in 1249, and was succeeded by his son Muhammad."
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"Agra"
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When was the director of film The Vanquished born?
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The Vanquished The Vanquished is a 1953 American Western film directed by Edward Ludwig, written by Lewis R. Foster, Winston Miller and Frank L. Moss, and starring John Payne, Jan Sterling, Coleen Gray, Lyle Bettger, Willard Parker, Roy Gordon and John Dierkes. It was released on June 3, 1953, by Paramount Pictures. The war over, civil administrator Roger Hale has become the scourge of the Southern town of Galeston, exacting his own kind of justice. He and his ex-prostitute lover Rose Slater also have moved into the Grayson manor, childhood home of Rockwell Grayson, who has been away fighting in the war. After ostensibly going to see inspector general Hildebrandt to request he investigate Hale's activities, Rock instead returns to form an alliance with Hale, offering to become his tax collector and siding with him publicly against the townspeople. Jane Colfax, his former sweetheart, is shocked by Rock's behavior, as are others. Rose's greed leads her to purchase a nearby plantation with Hale's ill-gotten gains and offer to cut Rock in on their profits. She also persuades Hale to sign a document bequeathing his possessions to her should anything happen to him. Rock is revealed to be working undercover on the general's behalf, gaining information to use against Hale. A former union officer, Kirby, learns of Rock's real mission. Rock is shot and reveals his true purpose to Jane, who forgives him and threatens Rose with a pair of scissors. Rose then shoots Hale, possibly by mistake, possibly not. Rock gets the better of Kirby and reunites with Jane. In May 1951 Pine-Thomas Productions signed a contract with Paramount to turn out at least eight films in 1952 and 1953. The proposed projects included an adaptation of the unpublished novel "The Rebel" by Karl Brown. They also signed a contract with John Payne to make six films in three years. In April 1952 it was announced Pine-Thomas would make the film as "Thunderbolt" and it would star Payne and Arlene Dahl, who had just made "Caribbean" for Pine-Thomas. The film would be the second of a three-picture deal Dahl had signed with the company. It was described as a "Scarlet Pimpernel of the south". Edward Ludwig signed to direct.
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"Giuliana Berlinguer Giuliana Berlinguer (; 23 November 1933 – 15 September 2014) was an Italian director, screenwriter, and novelist. Born in Mantua, Berlinguer studied at the Silvio d’Amico Academy of Dramatic Arts, where she graduated in stage direction. She later focused on television, directing several RAI TV-movies and series, notably a successful 1969 \"Nero Wolfe\" miniseries starring Tino Buazzelli in the title role. In 1983 she directed the war-drama film \"Il disertore\", which was screened at the Venice Film Festival. She was the wife of Giovanni Berlinguer, the brother of Enrico Berlinguer.",
"Disengagement (film) Disengagement (\"Désengagement\") is a film directed by Amos Gitai, starring Juliette Binoche, with Jeanne Moreau in a supporting role. The film is a French/Italian/Israeli co-production, and was shot in France, Germany and Israel. It is the third film of Gitai's \"Border\" or \"Frontier\" trilogy. The film premiered at the 2007 Venice Film Festival in an out-of-competition slot. Following this the picture played at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival. Following the death of her father, Ana (Binoche) and her adopted brother Uli (Liron Levo) meet in Avignon. It is stated in her father's will that Ana cannot receive her inheritance until she has found the child she abandoned as a teenager. This journey leads her to Gaza during the 2005 Israeli disengagement, a time fraught with danger and uncertainty. The film received largely positive reviews from \"Variety\" and \"Screen International\".",
"David Wellington (director) David Wellington (born 1963) is a Canadian film and television director, best known for the films \"I Love a Man in Uniform\" and the 1996 adaptation of \"Long Day's Journey into Night\". He has also directed episodes of the television series \"The Hidden Room\", \"The Eleventh Hour\", \"Queer as Folk\", \"Saving Hope,\" \"Rookie Blue\" and \"Orphan Black\". His brother Peter is also a film and television director, who along with David, directs for \"Saving Hope\".",
"Tonino Ricci Tonino Ricci (23 October 1927 – 9 March 2014), sometimes credited as Anthony Richmond, was an Italian film director and screenwriter. Ricci was born Teodoro Ricci in Rome on October 23, 1927. He began working in film as an assistant director in the early 1960s and is credited in such films as \"The Mercenaries\" (1961), \"Sword of the Conqueror\" (1961), and \"Superargo and the Faceless Giants\" (1968). He made his directorial debut with the 1969 war film \"Salt in the Wound\". Ricci died March 9, 2014, in Rome.",
"Jean van de Velde (director) Jean van de Velde (born 14 March 1957) is a Dutch film director and screenwriter. He has directed twelve films since 1979. His film \"The Silent Army\" competed in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival. He is the father of actor Yannick van de Velde.",
"Denys Arcand Georges-Henri Denys Arcand (; born June 25, 1941) is a French Canadian film director, screenwriter and producer. His film \"The Barbarian Invasions\" won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film in 2004. His films have also been nominated three further times, including two nominations in the same category for \"The Decline of the American Empire\" in 1986 and \"Jesus of Montreal\" in 1989, becoming the only French-Canadian director in history whose films have received this number of nominations and, subsequently, to have a film win the award. Also for \"The Barbarian Invasions\", he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay, losing to Sofia Coppola for \"Lost in Translation\". During his four decades career, he became the most globally recognized director from Quebec, winning many awards from the Cannes Film Festival, including the Best Screenplay Award, the Jury Prize, and many other prestigious awards worldwide. He won three César Awards in 2004 for \"The Barbarian Invasions\": Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best Film, being the only Canadian director to have accomplished this. Arcand has directed three Canadian films that have received an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film and three films in the Toronto International Film Festival's 2004 list of the top 10 Canadian films of all time. Arcand was born in Deschambault, Quebec, Canada. He grew up in a devoutly Roman Catholic home in a village about 40 km southwest of Quebec City. He attended Jesuit school for nine years. Entering his teen years, the family moved to Montreal and although he dreamed about being a professional tennis player, while studying for a master's degree in history at the Université de Montréal he became involved in film making, which gave him a new sense of direction. In 1963, he joined the National Film Board of Canada where he produced several award-winning documentaries in his native French language. A social activist, he made a feature-length documentary in 1970 titled \"Cotton Mill, Treadmill (On est au coton)\" that showed the exploitation of textile workers. The film caused an uproar that resulted in it not being distributed publicly for several years. Arcand received such publicity that it gave his fledgling career a great boost.",
"Philippe Van Leeuw Philippe Van Leeuw is a Belgian film director, screenwriter and cinematographer. He made his feature-length debut in 2009 with \"The Day God Walked Away\". In 2017, he wrote and directed \"Insyriated\", which premiered at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival. At the 8th Magritte Awards, the film won all six awards it was nominated for, tying the Magritte Awards record for most awards won (alongside \"Mr. Nobody\"), including Best Film and Best Director for Van Leeuw.",
"Vanquisher Vanquisher may refer to:",
"Stricken (2010 film) Stricken is an American film that premiered on June 25, 2010, It was directed and written by Matthew Sconce, the movie starred Stephanie French and David Fine of Rent, Sweet November, The Pursuit of Happiness, and many other films. It is based on the short film of the same name that won Best Sound Design at the Action On Film Festival in 2007, and its screenplay won Best Adapted Screenplay in 2008. After her mother's death and her father's brutal suicide, 25-year-old Sarah Black fears she is losing her grip on reality. She is haunted by nightmares and terrifying visions, and she cannot shake the feeling that something evil is about to find her. When people she cares about start to die, Sarah believes she may be next. Detective Scott Aro has been investigating a string of murders for 10 years, but nothing he has seen can prepare him for what lies ahead. As hope seems lost, the two must face the evil that has been unleashed and battle to stay alive as they discover some things will not stay dead...",
"Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. (, born 26 July 1965 in Amsterdam) is a Dutch filmmaker, writer and producer best known for \"Red Rain\" and \"The Thing\". Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. began directing at an early age with promotional trailers for Toyota, Peugeot, Renault, Stella Artois, Pepsi, and Bud Light. In 1996, van Heijningen made his film directing debut with the Dutch short-film thriller \"Red Rain\". In 2011, he directed \"The Thing\", a prequel to \"John Carpenter's The Thing\". Van Heijningen was due to direct \"Army of the Dead\", but the project ended up being directed by Zack Snyder after lingering in development hell for a number of years. In 2020, van Heijningen directed his second feature \"The Forgotten Battle\", a Netflix original war film depicting the Battle of the Scheldt. Netflix's first ever original Dutch film. Director Producer Other credits He is the son of Dutch film producer Matthijs van Heijningen Sr."
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"October 7, 1899"
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When was Mariam De Bagration's father born?
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Mariam de Bagration Princess Mariam de Bagration (born 27 June 1947 in Madrid) is a Spanish-Georgian noblewoman ("tavadi") of the House of Mukhrani. Princess Mariam was born on 27 June 1947 in Madrid. She is a dentist. She is a daughter of Prince Irakli Bagration of Mukhrani and Infanta María de las Mercedes de Baviera y Borbón. In 1968 she married Spanish Ambassador José Luis Blanco-Briones y de Cuéllar (1935-1985). She has one daughter from this marriage: In 1982 she married Dr. Tomás Ortiz y Valero and has a son from this marriage: She is a sister of Bagrat de Bagration and half-sister of Jorge de Bagration.
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"Prince Bagrat of Imereti Bagrat () (1741–1800) was a Georgian royal prince (\"batonishvili\") of the Bagrationi dynasty of Imereti. He was the common ancestor of all male-line descendants of the kings of Imereti, surviving into the 21st century. Prince Bagrat was a younger of King Alexander V of Imereti by his wife, Tamar née Abashidze. He was, thus, a younger brother of King Solomon I of Imereti and an uncle of Solomon II, the last reigning monarch of Imereti. Prince Bagrat was married to Mariam (1741–1820), daughter of Prince Giorgi, Eristavi of Guria. He had two children:",
"George Nikolaevich Bagration Prince Giorgi Nikolozis dze Bagration of Mukhrani () (1834-1882) was a Georgian nobleman of the House of Mukhrani. Prince George was son of Prince Nicholas Bagration of Mukhrani and Princess Tamar Jorjadze. George married Ekaterine Aleksi-Meskhishvili (1845-1905) and they had 17 children:",
"Pyotr Bagration Prince Pyotr Ivanovich Bagration (10 July 1765 – 24 September 1812) was a Russian general and prince of Georgian origin, prominent during the Napoleonic Wars. Bagration, a member of the Bagrationi dynasty, was born in Tbilisi. His father () served as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army, in which Bagration also enlisted in 1782. Pyotr Ivanovich Bagration began his military career serving in the Russo-Circassian War of 1763–1864 for a couple of years. Afterwards he participated in a war against the Ottomans and the capture of Ochakov in 1788. Later he helped suppress the Kościuszko Uprising of 1794 in Poland and capture Warsaw. During Russia's Italian and Swiss campaigns of 1799 against the French, he served with distinction under Field Marshal Alexander Suvorov. In 1805 Russia joined the coalition against Napoleon. After the collapse of the Austrians at Ulm in October 1805, Bagration won praise for his successful defense in the Battle of Schöngrabern (November 1805) that allowed Russian forces to withdraw and unite with the main Russian army of Mikhail Kutuzov. In December 1805 the combined Russo-Austrian army suffered defeat at the Battle of Austerlitz, where Bagration commanded the allied right wing against the French under Jean Lannes. Later he commanded Russian troops in the Finnish War (1808-1809) against Sweden and in another war against the Turks (1806–1812) on the Danube. During the French invasion of Russia in 1812, Bagration commanded one of two large Russian armies (Barclay de Tolly commanded the other) fighting a series of rear-guard actions. The Russians failed to stop the French advance at the Battle of Smolensk in August 1812. Barclay had proposed a scorched-earth retreat that the Emperor Alexander I of Russia had approved, although Bagration preferred to confront the French in a major battle. Mikhail Kutuzov succeeded Barclay as Commander-in-Chief but continued his policy until the Battle of Borodino () near Moscow. Bagration commanded the left wing around what became known as the Bagration flèches at Borodino, where he was mortally wounded; he died a couple of weeks later.",
"Marie-Clementine Bagration Princess Marie-Clementine Bagration () (29 September 1810 – 26 May 1829) was the illegitimate daughter of Prince Klemens von Metternich with Princess Catherine Bagration. Marie-Clementine was born on 29 September 1810 in Vienna as the illegitimate daughter of Prince Klemens von Metternich with Princess Catherine Bagration. By the order and personal involvement of the Russian Emperor Alexander I, she was recognized and recorded as the legitimate daughter of General of Russian imperial army Prince Pyotr Bagration who was a husband of Catherine Bagration, and became an official member of the Georgian royal Bagrationi dynasty. Her real father served as the Foreign Minister and Chancellor of the Austrian Empire and is best remembered for convening the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Marie-Clementine married Graf Otto von Blome (1795–1884), a son of Friedrich von Blome, on 12 July 1828. Together, they were the parents of one son: Princess Marie-Clementine died on 26 May 1829 in Paris. Through her only child, she was posthumously a grandmother of nine, including Countess Marie-Clementine Blome (who died young), Karl Otto Arnold (1861–1926), Countess Maria Sophie Blome (who died young), Louis Pius Blome (1865–1930), Johannes Hubertus Xaverius (1867–1945), who married Princess Martha Elisabeth Maria Stirbey, Countess Maria Adeline Blome (who died young), Countess Anna Maria Blome (1871–1960), Countess Maria Giulia Sidonia Blome (1873–1939), and Countess Maria Karola Blome (1877–1951), a nun.",
"Petre Bagration-Gruzinsky Petre Aleksandres dze Bagrationi Gruzinsky () (26 April 1857 – 3 February 1922) was a Georgian prince (\"batonishvili\"), a descendant of the Kakhetian branch (Gruzinsky) of the Bagrationi dynasty, the former royal house of Georgia. Petre was the son of Prince Alexander Bagration-Gruzinsky. Prince Petre married Princess Tamara Dekanozishvili (1897–1977) at the Navtlugi Church of St. Barbara in Tbilisi in 1915 and had two sons:",
"Princess Mariam of Georgia Mariam () (1755 – 3 November 1828) was a Georgian princess royal (\"batonishvili\"), daughter of Heraclius II, the penultimate King of Kartli and Kakheti. Like her sisters, Ketevan and Thecla, Mariam was a poet of some talent and wrote in the spirit of early Romanticism. Mariam was the 12th child of Heraclius II and the second daughter born of that ruler's third marriage to Darejan Dadiani. In 1777, Mariam married Prince David Tsitsishvili (1749–1792), a scion of the medieval house of Panaskerteli and governor (\"mouravi\") of the royal capital of Tbilisi. The couple had 7 children: After the annexation of the Georgian kingdom by the Russian Empire in 1801, the widowed princess Mariam lived a reclusive life. Being one of the few members of the Georgian royal family to avoid deportation to Russia proper, she retired to her rural estate at Kareli, part of her dowry. In 1803, the Russian authorities contemplated to give her the village of Didi Shulaveri in permanent and hereditary possession, but this was eventually ruled to be unfeasible. Instead, Mariam's son, Evstati Tsitsishvili, was granted a lifelong pension of revenues earned from that village. Mariam died at Kareli after a long illness in 1828. She was buried at the Sioni Cathedral in Tbilisi. Like several members of her family, such as her sisters—Ketevan and Tekle—Mariam had a literary talent. Her friend, Princess Barbare Kobulashvili recalls that the contemporaries highly regarded her for her poetry and love for music. Her works, such as her best poem, \"Alas, that the sweetness of time should turn better\" (ჰოი, დამწარდეს დროთა ტკბილობა), are of early Romantic flavor, inspired by the loss of the native kingdom and family.",
"Irakli Bagration of Mukhrani (1813–1892) Prince Irakli Konstantines dze Bagration of Mukhrani () or Prince Irakli Konstantinovich Bagration-Mukhranski (1813-1892) was a Georgian nobleman of the House of Mukhrani. Son of Constantine IV of Mukhrani or Prince Konstantiné Ioannovich Bagration-Mukhranski and wife Marié Khoreshan Guramishvili or Princess Maria Khoreshan Zaalovna Guramova (1786-1831). In 1848 Irakli married Princess Ketevan Mkhardgrdzéli-Arghutashvili or Princess Ekaterina Ivanovna Argutinskaya-Dolgorukova (1813 - 1880?), daughter of Prince Ioann Mkhardgrdzéli-Arghutashvili or Prince Ivan Zakharievich Argutinsky-Dolgorukov and wife Princess Nina Tumanova, a relative of Prince Cyril Toumanoff. They were parents of eight children:",
"Bagration-Davitishvili Bagration-Davitashvili () is a Georgian noble family, a cadet branch of the Kakhetian line of the Bagrationi royal dynasty. In turn, Kakhetian line descends from George VIII, last king of the united Georgian kingdom and first king of Kakheti. Their ancestry traces back to the Kakhetian prince Davit whose father, Demetre, was blinded by his brother George II the Wicked after the latter killed his reigning father Alexander I, and usurped the crown in 1511. The Bagration-Davitashvili fled Kakheti to the neighboring Georgian kingdom of Kartli where they persisted as a princely family. After the annexation of Georgia by Imperial Russia, the family, in the person of Solomon Bagration-Davitashvili, was confirmed in princely dignity (, Bagration-Davidov or Bagration-Davidoff) on December 21, 1849.",
"Dmitry Arkadjevich Bagin Father Dmitry Arkadjevich Bagin (German: Martirij Bagin) (born 1956) is a Russian-Greek Catholic priest. Bagin was born in Moscow in 1956. He graduated from the Gnesin School of Music. In 1977, he was tonsured a monk with the name Martyrios, and was ordained as a deacon. Bagin graduated from the Moscow Theological Seminary and the Moscow Theological Academy, receiving the title 'Candidate of Theology'. In 1986 he was ordained priest, serving in the Moscow diocese. Since 1989, Bagin was head of the Moscow church of Nativity in Kapotnya, and from 1991, of the Church of All Saints in Kulishki. In September 1998, he was removed from service and temporarily banned from serving as an Orthodox priest. In 1999, he joined the Catholic Church, and, in 2000, he was appointed confessor of the Catholic organization Collegium Orientale in Ayhshtatt, Bavaria. In 2010, he was succeeded in that post by Slovak Catholic priest Michal Leshchishin, and was appointed rector of the Russian Greek Catholic Church in Munich. Bagin is also working in Catholic education and religious programs in radio stations.",
"Elizabeth Bagration Princess Elisabed Aleksandres Asuli Bagration of Mukhrani () (1880-1915) was a Georgian noblewoman of the House of Mukhrani. Princess Elizabeth was born on 14 April 1880. She was a daughter of Prince Alexander Mikheilis dze Bagration (1856-1935) and Princess Nino Tarkhan-Mouravi (1860-1934). On 23 October 1899 she married Prince Boris Sergeevych Sheremetev (1871-1952) and had 2 children with him: On 14 April 1914 she married Marco Morizo De la Roca (1881-1945). She had no children with him. Princess Elizabeth died on 8 April 1915. She was a grandmother of Tatiana Fabergé."
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"21 March 1909"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Peck'S Bad Boy With The Circus?
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Peck's Bad Boy with the Circus Peck's Bad Boy with the Circus is a 1938 American comedy film directed by Edward F. Cline, based on the book of the same name by George W. Peck, one of his stories of Peck's Bad Boy. Bill Peck receives 10 dollars from his parents to go to summer camp and defend his trophy, however he gets forced to spend the money on tickets to a circus that is in town, in revenge he feeds the lions his mom's sleeping pills and ruins Bailey the lion tamer's act, then he goes into the circus camp and falls in love with bareback rider Fleurette de Cava, who unfortunately sprains her ankle in rehearsals and will lose her contract if she does not perform in the next show, so Bailey has the idea of giving Bill a wig and having him do the show with his guidance, but just before the act begins Bailey finds out who drugged his lions.
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"Henry Cass Henry Cass (24 June 1903 – 15 March 1989) was a British director, particularly prolific in film in the horror and comedy genres. Previously an actor, he was also a prolific stage director of classical theatre at the Old Vic in the 1930s. In 1923, Lee DeForest filmed Cass for a short film \"Henry Cass Demonstration Film\" made in DeForest's Phonofilm sound-on-film process. The film was previewed at the Engineers Society of New York on 12 April 1923, and premiered at the Rivoli Theatre in New York on 15 April 1923 with 17 other short Phonofilms. He was married to the actress Joan Hopkins.",
" He also guest-starred on dozens of television series including \"The Untouchables\", \"Perry Mason\", \"The Fugitive\", \"Kentucky Jones\", \"Get Smart\", \"\" (\"Tomorrow Is Yesterday\", 1967), \"Cannon\", and \"Bonanza\", as well as films such as \"Heaven Can Wait\", \"Bullitt\", \"Cheech and Chong's Next Movie\", and \"The Prisoner of Second Avenue\". He played the Governor's director of security, Captain McDermott, on several episodes of \"Benson\". He played a rabbi in an episode of \"The Dick Van Dyke Show\". On January 20, 1952, Peck married advertising copywriter Phyllis Houston in New York. Peck died of a heart attack on September 12, 1992, in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 75. His remains were donated to medical science.",
"Raymond Wilson Peck Raymond Wilson Peck (July 3, 1874 - March 16, 1950) was a writer, lyricist, and composer. He was the president of The Lambs from 1945 to 1947. He was born in Jackson, Mississippi on July 3, 1874. He joined The Lambs in 1910 and served on the house committee, as the librarian, and as the recording secretary. He replaced John L. Golden as president of The Lambs in 1945.In 1947 he was replaced by Bert Lytell. He managed the Percy Williams Home for Retired Actors and Actresses in East Islip, New York. He died at the Percy Williams Home for Retired Actors and Actresses in East Islip, New York on March 16, 1950.",
"Jess Robbins Jess Robbins (April 30, 1886 – March 11, 1973) was an American film director, writer and producer. He directed more than 70 films between 1913 and 1927. He was the first director to direct Laurel and Hardy in the same motion picture, namely \"The Lucky Dog\".",
"Circus World (film) Circus World (released as The Magnificent Showman in the United Kingdom) is a 1964 drama film starring John Wayne, Claudia Cardinale and Rita Hayworth. It was directed by Henry Hathaway and produced by Samuel Bronston, with a screenplay by Ben Hecht, Julian Zimet (writing under the pseudonym Julian Halevy), and James Edward Grant, from a story by Bernard Gordon and Nicholas Ray. The idea for \"Circus World\" originated from screenwriter Bernard Gordon. Nicholas Ray was initially assigned to direct the project until he suffered a heart attack while filming \"55 Days at Peking\" (1963). He was replaced by Frank Capra who later entered into creative differences with co-writer James Edward Grant and John Wayne. By the summer of 1963, Capra was replaced with Henry Hathaway. Filming commenced in September 1963 and concluded in February 1964. Prior to the film's release, the financial failure of \"The Fall of the Roman Empire\" (1964) caused Samuel Bronston Productions to accumulate severe debts to financier Pierre S. du Pont III. It would be the last in a series of big budget epics produced by Bronston in Spain. The film premiered at the Loew's Cinerama Theater on June 25, 1964. It received mixed reviews from film critics and was a financial disappointment. Matt Masters (John Wayne), a Wild West circus star in the mold of Buffalo Bill Cody, bought a bankrupt circus in 1885 and successfully rebuilt it into a combination three ring and Wild West extravaganza, mixing Wild West Show acts with conventional circus acts in a winning combination. He has successfully toured the United States for more than a decade. Now that the century is about to turn, he wants to take his show to Europe. His Circus Boss, Cap Carson (Lloyd Nolan), is against taking the show across the Atlantic. He maintains that Europe is bad luck for American circuses. He also calls Matt on his reason for making a European tour: Masters wants to find the lost great love of his life, Lili Alfredo (Rita Hayworth), and figures that this tour will smoke her out if for no other reason than to see her child, Toni Alfredo (Claudia Cardinale), Masters' adopted daughter. One of his Western stars and wannabe-partner, Steve McCabe (John Smith), also attempts to dissuade Masters, but to no avail.",
"Richard C. Kahn Richard C. Kahn (January 26, 1897 in New Orleans, Louisiana - January 28, 1960 in Hollywood, California) was an American film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his B movies of the 1930s and early 1940s. He often worked with an all-black cast. His feature films include \"Secret Menace\" (1931), \"The Third Sex\" (1934), \"Two-Gun Man from Harlem\" (1938), \"The Bronze Buckaroo\" (1939), \"Harlem Rides the Range\" (1939), \"Son of Ingagi\" (1940), \"Buzzy Rides the Range\" (1940), \"Buzzy and the Phantom Pinto\" (1941) and \"Guns Don't Argue\" (1957) (with Bill Karn). In 1955 he directed an episode of \"Grand Ole Opry\", and in 1958 he directed two episodes of \"Sky King\", \"Rodeo Decathlon\" and \"The Brain and the Brawn\". He produced three Herbert Jeffrey films.",
"Marc Breaux Marc Breaux (November 3, 1924 – November 19, 2013) was an American choreographer and occasional film director best known for his work on musical films of the 1960s and 1970s. Most of his well-known work was in collaboration with Dee Dee Wood to whom he was married for many years. Much of Breaux's best recognized work was also in collaboration with the songwriting Sherman Brothers. In 1948 he appeared on Broadway in the original cast of \"Kiss Me, Kate\" at the New Century Theatre in New York City and in 1958 he appeared in \"Li'l Abner\" at the St. James Theatre, also in New York City. Marc Breaux with Dee Dee Wood, choreographed the Broadway musical \"Do-Re-Mi,\" from 1960 through 1962. Following some health issues in the late 1970s, Breaux went to work for ex-producer Nick Vanoff at Vanoff's Hollywood post-production company Complete Post. Breaux was videotape operator for the company for nearly 20 years until his retirement in the mid-1990s.",
"Raoul Peck Raoul Peck (born 9 September 1953 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti) is a Haitian filmmaker, of both documentary and feature films. He is known for using historical, political, and personal characters to tackle and recount societal issues and historical events. Peck was Haiti's Minister of Culture from 1996 to September 1997. His film \"I Am Not Your Negro\" (2016), about the life of James Baldwin and race relations in the United States, was nominated for an Oscar in January 2017 and won a César Award in France. Peck is also the founder of Velvet Film, a film production company in Paris, New York, and Port-au-Prince. He also founded \"El Dorado Forum\" (Port-au-Prince, Haiti) in 1995, a center that supports the creativity and enrichment of artists. Peck was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. At the age of eight, Peck and his family (he has three brothers including Hébert Peck) fled the Duvalier dictatorship and joined his father in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). His father Hebert B. Peck, an agronomist, worked for the United Nations FAO and UNESCO and had taken a job there as professor of agriculture along with many Haitian professionals invited by the government to fill positions recently vacated by Belgians departing after independence. His mother, Giselle, would serve as aide and secretary to mayors of Kinshasa for many years. The family resided in DRC for the next 24 years. Peck attended schools in the DRC (Kinshasa), in the United States (Brooklyn), and in France (Orléans) where he earned a baccalaureate, before studying industrial engineering and economics at Berlin's Humboldt University. Peck always had artistic dreams, but these were frowned upon in Haiti, his home country. He then decided to wait until after completing his studies at Humboldt University to return to Haiti and pursue his cinematic career. He said, \"It's what saved me. I didn't come to Europe thinking that I was going to stay. I knew that I had to educate myself as much as possible, then return to Haiti secretly if need be.\" Peck later spent a year as a New York City taxi driver and worked (1980–85) as a journalist and photographer before earning a film degree (1988) from the German Film and Television Academy Berlin (DFFB) in West Berlin.",
"John Ford filmography John Ford (1894–1973) was an American film director whose career spanned from 1913 to 1971. During this time he directed more than 140 films. Born in Maine, Ford entered the filmmaking industry shortly after graduating from high school with the help of his older brother, Francis Ford, who had established himself as a leading man and director for Universal Studios. After working as an actor, assistant director, stuntman, and prop man – often for his brother – Universal gave Ford the opportunity to direct in 1917. Initially working in short films, he quickly moved into features, largely with Harry Carey as his star. In 1920 Ford left Universal and began working for the Fox Film Corporation. During the next ten years he directed more than 30 films, including the westerns \"The Iron Horse\" (1924) and \"3 Bad Men\" (1926), both starring George O'Brien, the war drama \"Four Sons\" and the Irish romantic drama \"Hangman's House\" (both 1928 and both starring Victor McLaglen). In the same year of these last two films, Ford directed his first all-talking film, the short \"Napoleon's Barber\". The following year he directed his first all-talking feature, \"The Black Watch\". In 1931, Ford began working for other studios, starting with \"Arrowsmith\" for Samuel Goldwyn. In 1934, he began a lengthy association with producer Merian C. Cooper at RKO Radio Pictures. The following year he directed \"The Informer\", which brought him his first Academy Award for Best Director and the Best Actor Award for its star, Victor McLaglen. In 1939, Ford began to make a series of outstanding films starting with \"Stagecoach\", which made John Wayne a major star and brought an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor to Thomas Mitchell. It was also the first time Ford filmed in Monument Valley. That same year Ford made \"Young Mr. Lincoln\" and \"Drums Along the Mohawk\", both with Henry Fonda. The latter was Ford's first film shot in Technicolor. In 1940 Ford made \"The Grapes of Wrath\" with Fonda and \"The Long Voyage Home\" with Wayne and Mitchell. For the former film Ford received his second Academy Award for Best Director and the Best Supporting Actress for Jane Darwell.",
"Jo Andres Mary Jo Andres Buscemi (May 21, 1954 – January 6, 2019) was an American filmmaker, choreographer and artist. Andres was born in Wichita, Kansas, on May 21, 1954. She first became known on the kinetic downtown New York performance scene of the 1980s for her film/dance/light performances, shown at the Performing Garage, La Mama Experimental Theater Club P.S. 122, St. Marks Danspace, and the Collective for Living Cinema. As a filmmaker, Andres drew acclaim and awards for the 1996 film \"Black Kites\" which aired on PBS and played several film festivals, including Sundance, Berlin, Toronto, London and Human Rights Watch Film Festivals. Andres directed music and art videos, as well as her own film performance works. Andres was a dance consultant to the acclaimed Wooster Group. She was an artist-in-residence at leading universities, museums and art colonies, including Yaddo, and The Rockefeller Study Center in Bellagio, Italy. Andres created a series of cyanotype photographs which can be seen on her website. She married actor Steve Buscemi in 1987; they had one son, Lucian, born in 1990. Andres died at her home in Brooklyn on January 6, 2019, at age 64, from encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis, a rare disease of the bowel. A private memorial service was held on January 8."
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"May 22, 1961"
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Do director of film Amar Jyoti and director of film Black Joy (1977 Film) share the same nationality?
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Jyoti (1988 film) Jyoti is a 1988 Bengali film directed by Shabda Kumar and produced by Asis Ray. The film features actors Prosenjit Chatterjee and Anuradha Patel in the lead roles. Music of the film has been composed by Sapan Jagmohan. This film also dubbed in Hindi as "Amber" (1984). Songs of this film are very popular. Lyricist Gouri Prasanna Majumder and Pulak Banerjee. Lyricist Mahendra Dehlvi, Gauhar Kanpuri and Shabda Kumar.
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"Salil Dutta Salil Dutta (1932 – 20 September 2004) was an Indian Bengali director, screenwriter and actor. Dutta was born in 1932 in British India. He started his career as assistant director of \"Trijama\" in 1956 and \"Khokababur Pratyabartan\" in 1960. The first film directed by him is Surya Sikha (1963) starred Uttam Kumar and Supriya Choudhury. He also acted in a number of films like \"Atithi (1965 film)\", \"Khelaghar\", \"Dhanyee Meye\" etc. Dutta directed 22 Bengali films in his career. He died on 20 September 2004 in Kolkata due to lung cancer.",
"Jyoti Prakash Dutta Jyoti Prakash Dutta may refer to:",
"Jyoti Prasad Agarwala Jyoti Prasad Agarwala (17 June 1903 – 17 January 1951) was a noted Indian playwright, songwriter, poet, writer and film maker from Assam. He was considered as Assamese cultural icon, deeply revered for his creative vision and output and is popularly called the \"Rupkonwar\" of Assamese culture. In fact, he is regarded as the founder of Assamese cinema for \"Joymoti\" (1935). His death anniversary (17 January) is observed as \"Silpi divas\" (Artists' Day) in his honor. Jyoti Prasad Agarwala was born on 17 June 1903 to an Agrawal family, to Paramananda Agarwala and Kiranmoyee Devi at Tamulbari Tea Estate. His uncles were renowned Assamese poets Chandra Kumar Agarwala and Ananda Chandra Agarwala. His forefather, Nabrangram Agarwala, had come to Assam in 1811 from the Marwar region in Rajasthan. After completing his studies in various schools in Assam and Calcutta, he matriculated in 1921. He went to Edinburgh in 1926 to study economics, but returned in 1930 before completing his course. On his way back, he spent seven months at the UFA studio in Germany learning film-making. After his return to Assam, he continued his activities for Indian independence that had disrupted his studies earlier and in 1932 he was imprisoned for fifteen months. He established the Chitraban Studio at the Bholaguri Tea Estate and began filming the movie \"Joymoti\" around the end of 1933. This was the first film from Assam. The film, released in 1935, was based on a play by Laxminath Bezbarua about the heroic Ahom princess Sati Joymoti imprisoned and tortured by a repressive Ahom swargadeo. In 1936 he married Devajani Bhuyan. In 1941 he participated in the freedom movement, and in 1942, he went underground to escape British repression. Toward the end of his life he moved from a romantic to a more radical vision, which was reflected in his works. He died of cancer on 17 January 1951 at his residence Poki in Tezpur, Assam, India. Short Stories and more.",
"Yash Johar Yash Johar (6 September 1929 – 26 June 2004) was an Indian film producer and the founder of Dharma Productions. His films featured lavish sets, were often set in \"exotic\" locations, and incorporated Indian traditions and family values. He is the father of Karan Johar, now a noted producer himself. Johar was born on 6 September 1929 in Amritsar, Punjab, in a Punjabi family. He was married to Hiroo, sister of filmmaker Yash Chopra. He died on 26 June 2004 in Mumbai, aged 74, of a chest infection, though he had also been fighting cancer. After his death, his son took over Dharma Productions. Johar began his career in Bollywood in 1962 in Sunil Dutt's production house Ajanta Arts. He was associated with films like \"Mujhe Jeene Do\" and \"Yeh Raaste Hai Pyaar Ke\". He helped filmmaker Dev Anand handle the production of his film \"Guide (film)\", which was successful at the box office. He continued with Dev Anand's Navketan Films and handled production of films like \"Jewel Thief\", \"Prem Pujari\" and \"Hare Rama Hare Krishna\". In 1976, Johar launched his own banner, Dharma Productions. The first film produced by the company, \"Dostana\", directed by Raj Khosla, was a huge box office success. They produced a handful of other films in the 1980s and early 1990s, most notably \"Agneepath\", \"Gumrah\" and \"Duplicate\". They had unprecedented success with their 1998 award-winning film \"Kuch Kuch Hota Hai\", the directorial debut of his son Karan Johar. The film starring Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Rani Mukerji was one of the biggest hits of the year including the overseas market. The film was critically acclaimed as well, winning major awards. Karan's second directorial, \"Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham\", was also immensely successful. Johar was also involved in the production and distribution company Dreamz Unlimited founded in 1999 by Shah Rukh Khan, Juhi Chawla and Aziz Mirza. He helped set up the company as well as handling the production process of their first film, \"Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani\".",
"Jyoti Singh (actress) Jyoti Singh is a US-based actress of Indian origin. She is also the director of Yadvi - The Dignified Princess, a biopic on Maharani Yaduvanshi Kumari, the daughter of Maharaja Bhupinder Singh of Patiala. Jyoti Singh lived with her grandmother, Maharani Yaduvansh Kumari, till she was 13 years old. After that, she along with her mother and sisters moved to the United States of America. After working as an actress for close to a decade, Jyoti Singh turned a director with \"Yadvi the Dignified Princess\", which went on to be screened at numerous film festivals across the world. The film got positive to mixed reviews across board. As an actress Jyoti has worked on NBC mini series \"The Slap\" and the Bollywood movie \"Mirror Game\".",
"Amar Akbar Anthony Amar Akbar Anthony is a 1977 Indian masala film directed and produced by Manmohan Desai and written by Kader Khan. The film stars Vinod Khanna, Rishi Kapoor and Amitabh Bachchan opposite their female leads of Shabana Azmi, Neetu Singh and Parveen Babi, with Nirupa Roy, Pran and Jeevan in supporting roles. The plot focuses on three brothers separated in childhood who are adopted by families of different faiths: Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity. They grow up to become respectively a police officer, a qawwali singer, and the proprietor of a bootleg tavern in a poor neighborhood. The soundtrack album was composed by Laxmikant-Pyarelal and the lyrics were written by Anand Bakshi. The film was released on 27 May 1977 and earned at the Indian box office, becoming the highest-grossing Indian film of that year, alongside \"Dharam Veer\" and \"Hum Kisise Kum Naheen\". Religious tolerance became a landmark theme in Bollywood masala films, building on the masala formula pioneered a few years earlier by Nasir Hussain's \"Yaadon Ki Baaraat\" (1973). \"Amar Akbar Anthony\" also had a lasting impact on pop culture with its catchy songs, quotable one-liners, and the character of Anthony Gonsalves (played by Bachchan). It won several awards at the 25th Filmfare Awards, including Best Actor, Best Music Director and Best Editing. It was later remade in Tamil as \"Shankar Salim Simon\" (1978), in Telugu as \"Ram Robert Rahim\" (1980), and in Malayalam as \"John Jaffer Janardhanan\" (1982). In Pakistan, the film was unofficially remade in Punjabi as \"Akbar Amar Anthony\" (1978). On 15 August 1955, a former chauffeur named Kishanlal is released from jail after serving time for a fatal hit-and-run accident actually committed by Robert, the crime lord that he used to work for. Despite Robert's assurances that his family would be well looked after, Kishanlal comes home to find his wife Bharati suffering from tuberculosis and his three sons starving. Kishanlal seeks Robert's help, but Robert humiliates him instead and orders his henchmen to kill him.",
"Jeewan Jyoti (1953 film) Jeewan Jyoti, also Jeevan Jyoti, is a 1953 Indian Hindi-language film directed by Mahesh Kaul. It is the debut film of Shammi Kapoor and Chand Usmani. It stars Shashikala and Leela Mishra.",
"Deepak Bahry Deepak Bahry is a Bollywood film director and producer active since the mid-1970s. He is perhaps best known for his family-oriented action drama films, in which he often cast actors such as Mithun Chakraborty and Jagdeep throughout the late 1970s and 1980s in films such as \"Tarana\" (1979) and \"Ustadi Ustad Se\" (1982) and Ajay Devgan in the leading role in films such as \"Ek Hi Raasta\" in 1993. At one point in his career he had set up his own film company \"Bahry Films\". However his 1991 romantic film \"Kurbaan\" starring Salman Khan, Ayesha Jhulka, Sunil Dutt and Kabir Bedi was a Superhit and \"Parwana\" in 2003, his last film in which once again cast Ajay Devgan as the leading actor. He is uncle, mother's brother, of Bollywood character actor Divya Dutta.",
"Amar Oli Amar Oli (born 20 August 1980 at Dang district, Nepal) is a film director working primarily in the Nepali film industry for more than a decade. He began his career as an assistant director and actor. Later, he focused his attention on other aspects of film making such as production, cinematography and direction. He has produced and directed several Nepali movies, documentaries and music videos. His work as a director includes movies such as \"Aarop\", \"Chot\" and \"Dhartiputra\". Oli was passionate about movies since his childhood. In 2005, he got an opportunity to work on a Nepali film as an assistant director.",
"Jyoti Singh Jyoti Singh may refer to"
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"no"
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What is the award that the director of film The Objective earned?
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The Objective The Objective is a 2008 science fiction horror film directed by Daniel Myrick, and co-written by Myrick, Mark A. Patton, and Wesley Clark Jr. The film stars Jonas Ball, Matthew R. Anderson, and Michael C. Williams. The plot revolves around CIA Agent Benjamin Keynes recalling the time when he led a Special Forces team through the mountains of Afghanistan in search of an Afghan cleric, only to encounter strange paranormal incidents. It premiered in Morocco in April 2008 and in the United States in February 2009. In Ghazni Province, Afghanistan, a U.S. Army Special Forces team consisting of team leader Chief Warrant Officer Wally Hamer, Master-Sergeant Kenny Tanner, and Sergeants Vince Degetau, Joe Trinoski, Tim Cole, and Pete Sadler meets CIA Agent Benjamin Keynes, who indicates that their mission is to find a very important Afghan cleric by the name of Mohammed Aban. Hamer, briefs the men to be ready. After being inserted, the team finds a local guide, Abdul, in a village in Southern Afghanistan, where Aban is from. Together, they go to the mountains, where the cleric has a reputation for hiding. As they go further into the mountains, they begin to have strange encounters. First, they are ambushed by gunmen who kill Trinoski. The team returns fire, killing multiple gunmen, but when they check the bodies, they have disappeared. That night, the team spots headlights of a vehicle approaching. However, the two lights separate and then speedily fly into the sky and disappear. After speculating on what the lights may have been, they radio for a helicopter to resupply them. The next day, they cannot get reception on their radio or GPS. Their truck, damaged from the ambush, is struggling to move up the mountain. At night, the team hears a helicopter approaching, though they cannot spot it. As their radio is not working, they attempt to signal the helicopter. As the helicopter, still unseen, seems to be directly on top of them, the noise abruptly stops (something that shouldn't be physically possible). Meanwhile, the radio picks up what sounds like Persian or Arabic, but no one can understand it. They cache Trinoski's body so that they can move to a safer position for the night. The next morning, the team finds parts of Trinoski's body strewn out across rocks.
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[
"Nikkan Sports Film Award for Best Director The Nikkan Sports Film Award for Best Director is an award given at the Nikkan Sports Film Award.",
"Golden Lotus Award for Best Director Golden Lotus Award for Best Director () is one of the Golden Lotus Awards presented by the Macau Film and Television Media Association and China International Cultural Communication Center to directors working in the motion picture industry.",
"Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director The Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director is an award given by the Florida Film Critics Circle to honor the finest directing achievementes in filmmaking.",
"European Film Award for Best Cinematographer The European Film Award for Best Cinematographer, also known as Carlo Di Palma European Cinematographer Award, is an award given to cinematographers working in the motion picture industry by the European Film Academy.",
"Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Director The Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Director is one of the annual awards given by the Toronto Film Critics Association.",
"Satellite Award for Best Director The Satellite Award for Best Director is one of the annual Satellite Awards given by the International Press Academy.",
"National Board of Review Award for Best Director The National Board of Review Award for Best Director is one of the annual film awards given (since 1945) by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures.",
"European Film Award for Best Director The European Film Award for Best Director is an award given out at the annual European Film Awards to recognize a director who has exhibited outstanding directing while working in a film industry. The award is presented by the European Film Academy (EFA) and was first presented in 1988.",
"DGC Award for Best Direction in a Feature Film The DGC Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film is an annual Canadian award, presented by the Directors Guild of Canada to honour the year's best direction in feature films in Canada.",
"Czech Lion Award for Best Director Czech Lion Award for Best Director is an annual award given to the best Czech film director of the year."
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[
"Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award"
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Who died later, Joseph C. Hoagland or Joseph N. Dinand?
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Joseph Hoyt Joseph Hoyt may refer to:
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[
"Moses Hoagland Moses Hoagland (June 19, 1812 – April 16, 1865) was a U.S. Representative from Ohio. Born near Baltimore, Maryland, Hoagland attended the local public schools. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1842, commencing practice in Millersburg, Ohio. He served in the Ohio infantry during the Mexican War and was promoted to the rank of major for bravery in action. Hoagland was elected as a Democrat to the Thirty-first Congress (March 4, 1849 – March 3, 1851). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1850 to the Thirty-second Congress and returned home to resume the practice of law. He was appointed associate justice for the Territory of Washington on June 21, 1853, but declined to accept the position. He died in Millersburg and was interred in Oak Hill Cemetery.",
"Joseph Sneed Joseph Sneed may refer to:",
"Joseph Hallett Joseph Hallett may refer to:",
"Dinarvand Dinarvand () may refer to:",
"Joseph Hunkin Joseph Hunkin may refer to:",
"Joseph McLaughlin Joseph McLaughlin may refer to:",
"Joseph Annand Joseph Annand (1 January 1844 – 28 January 1932) was a missionary from Nova Scotia to the New Hebrides (now known as Vanuatu). He studied at Dalhousie College, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Pine Hill Divinity Hall before being ordained to missionary service in 1872. He served on Efate and Aneityum before being appointed the inaugural principal of the Teachers' Training Institute on Tangoa in 1894. He served in this position until his retirement in 1913. According to Arthur M. Smith, Annand \"firmly believed in the superiority of Western culture and Christianity,\" and was \"determined to stamp out traditional native practices, or <nowiki>'</nowiki>\"kastom,\"<nowiki>'</nowiki> through the introduction of Western material culture\".",
"Joseph Harrison Joseph Harrison may refer to:",
"Joseph Platt Joseph Platt may refer to:",
"Joseph Murphy Joseph Murphy may refer to:"
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[
"Joseph N. Dinand"
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Are Annie Adams Fields and Auguste Haouissée of the same nationality?
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Annie Adams Fields Annie Adams Fields (June 6, 1834 – January 5, 1915) was an American writer. Among her writings are collections of poetry and essays as well as several memoirs and biographies of her literary acquaintances. She was also interested in philanthropic work, in which she found her greatest pleasure. Her later years were spent as a companion to author Sarah Orne Jewett. Fields attended George B. Emerson's School for Young Ladies, Boston's most influential private secondary school for girls, where students were taught to read independently and trained to appreciate nature. She followed Emerson's advice about ongoing education by studying foreign languages, literature, nature, history, travel books, and biography, and cultivating one's "power of expression." Upon his suggestion, Fields began to keep a diary, though she usually kept her own feelings out of it. She sometimes recorded good thoughts or beautiful images which are presented or suggested by observing, reading, or conversing, and she often concentrated on recording table talk of her, often, eminent guests. The fullest congruence of Emerson's advice to his students and Annie Field's activities stems from his repeated insistence that "every good life is necessarily devoted, directly or indirectly, to the service of mankind." She was born Ann West Adams in Boston, Massachusetts, on June 9, 1834, the sixth of seven children of Zabdiel Boylston Adams and Sarah May Holland Adams. Among her siblings was her brother Zabdiel Boylston Adams, Jr. As a girl, she was enrolled at the School for Young Ladies in Boston operated by George Barrell Emerson, where she was encouraged to read, learned Italian, developed an interest in self-expression, and came to appreciate nature. She married James T. Fields on November 15, 1854, in King's Chapel in Boston with a service conducted by Reverend Ezra Stiles Gannett. She was his second wife; his first was a cousin of hers. Her husband was a well-established and respected publisher and with him she encouraged up and coming writers such as Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, and Emma Lazarus. She was equally at home with great and established figures including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Harriet Beecher Stowe, whose biography she compiled. At their home at 148 Charles Street in Boston, she established a regular literary salon where authors gathered.
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"Annie d'Arco Annie d'Arco (28 October 1920 – 5 March 1998) was a 20th-century French classical pianist. Born in Marseille, d'Arco studied the piano with Marguerite Long and won the Geneva competition in 1946. She gave her first concert with the Orchestre Lamoureux, under the direction of Eugène Bigot. She performed both as a soloist and as a chamber musician, notably with Henryk Szeryng, André Navarra, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Jean-Éric Thirault and Pierre Pierlot. She taught the piano at the École normale de musique de Paris for many years, and had many students with distinguished careers, including Christophe Larrieu, Catherine Joly and Marylin Frascone. She was married to Gilbert Coursier, a French horn player. D'Arco died in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris at age 77.",
"Annie Anzieu Annie Anzieu (April 1924 – 10 November 2019) was a French psychoanalyst and essayist who published a series of psychoanalytic studies. Anzieu earned a master's degree in philosophy and in speech-language pathology. She started as a speech therapist at Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital. Anzieu later became an honorary member of the French Psychoanalytic Association. She co-founded the Association for Child Psychoanalysis with Florence Guignard in 1984, and the European Society for Child and Adolescent Psychoanalysis (SEPEA) ten years later. She directed the department of child psychiatry at the Pitié-Salpêtre Hospital. Anne Anzieu was the wife of Didier Anzieu. She died on 10 November 2019.",
"Annie Ducaux Annie Ducaux (10 September 1908 – 31 December 1996) was a French actress, who appeared in 40 film and television productions between 1932 and 1980. Ducaux was a shareholder in the state theater Comédie-Française from 1948, and played in numerous stage productions there. She is possibly best-remembered for her roles in such films as Abel Gance's \"Beethoven's Great Love\" (1937), \"Conflict\" (1938, opposite Corinne Luchaire) and \"Les grandes familles\" (1958, opposite Jean Gabin). She was born Anne Marie Catherine Ducaux in Besançon, Doubs, Franche-Comté, and died in Champeaux, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France. She was married to the Swiss film producer Ernest Rupp, and had one child the French film producer Gérard Ducaux-Rupp.",
"Annie Smith Annie Smith may refer to:",
"Arabella Fields Arabella Fields (also known as Belle Fields, the Black Nightingale), (January 31, 1879 – after 1933) was an Afro American singer. She moved to Europe in 1894 and is thought to be among the first black-American artists to record in Europe, making recordings of songs by Stephen Foster. She spoke five languages and was successful with European audiences singing lieder and yodeling. Sarah Arabella Middleton was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on January 31, 1879. Although details of her early life are unknown, she claimed to have began performing in 1887 at the age of 8. In the summer of 1894, 15-year-old Arabella Middleton joined a vaudeville troupe organized by R.A. Cunningham heading for Europe. The 'San Francisco Minstrels', composed of four women and four men, opened in Berlin at the Charlotteburg Flora cabaret on August 30, 1894. After a three-month German tour, the troupe traveled across Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland before arriving in the Russian Empire in late 1895 to embark on a Siberian tour. During this tour, she married fellow troupe member, James C. Fields. After the troupe fell apart during mid-1897, the couple formed the 'James and Bella' duo, touring across Russia and Austria-Hungary. From 1900 to 1901, the couple toured Netherlands, United Kingdom and France as the 'American Jubilee Troubadours'. During her time with this troupe, Dutch newspapers began advertising Fields as the 'Black Nightingale'. In July 1902, after the troupe disbanded, James and Bella traveled to Berlin where Fields promptly left her husband and began working in theaters and cabarets around the German Reich. In 1904, Fields appeared in various German establishments, primarily in Berlin and Hamburg, performing arias and lieder. During this time, she met and married German Impresario and pianist, Engelhardt Albert Georg Winter (1878–1947). Winter originated from Bremen, where the couple established a residence. Winter deeply loved Fields, and the marriage did produce a child, however Fields treated it as a marriage of convenience to further her career. In the summer of 1905, her new impresario/husband organized her next concert. During the next 29-months, Fields performed around Holland, Germany and northern Austria.",
"Joseph M. Field Joseph M. Field (1810 – January 28, 1856) was an American actor and dramatist. He was born in London, came to America when very young, and for several years traveled through the country writing plays and acting them without attaining much reputation. In 1852 he assumed the management of a theatre in St. Louis, Missouri, where he was also later principal owner and an editor of the \"Reveille\", a daily newspaper. At the same time he became widely known for his humorous sketches signed \"Straws\" in the New Orleans \"Picayune\". On, November 6, 1837, Field married actress Eliza Riddle, with whom he had co-starred in several performances. Their daughter, Kate Field, was born in 1838, and went on to become a successful journalist and author. From 1841–1842, he traveled in Europe as an international reporter for the \"Picayune\". Field seemingly attended the Boston Lyceum lecture in October 1845 when Edgar Allan Poe controversially recited a version of \"Al Aaraaf\" and later declaimed the incident as an attempted hoax. Poe wrote directly to Field enlisting his help in defense against the Boston \"Frogpondians\". Among his plays was \"Family Ties\", written for Dan Marble for a prize of $500. He also wrote a dramatic response to Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 novel \"Uncle Tom's Cabin\" which he staged in New Orleans. He died at a hotel in Mobile, Alabama on January 28, 1856, and was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery, near where his daughter was studying.",
"Annie Wu Annie Wu may refer to:",
"Annie French Annie French (6 February 1872 – 27 January 1965) was a Scottish painter, engraver, illustrator, and designer associated with the Glasgow School. French was a student of Jean Delville and Fra Newbery at the Glasgow School of Art from 1896 to 1902. She shared a studio with artist Bessie Young and fellow Glasgow School painter Jane Younger from 1906 to 1914. She returned to the Glasgow School to teach ceramic decoration from 1909 to 1912. She published books of black and white illustration in the style of Beardsley. \"The Picture Book\" and \"The Plumed Hat\" were republished in elite art publications in 1906 and 1900 respectively. French was married to painter, engraver, and illustrator George Woolliscroft Rhead from 1914 until his death in 1920. She died at St Helier on the island of Jersey on 25 January 1965. As a member of a group of designers and artists known as the Glasgow Girls, French was best known for black-and-white illustrations in the Art Nouveau style. Her influences included Aubrey Beardsley, Jessie M. King, and Charles Rennie Mackintosh. French's work was exhibited at the Royal Academy and published in \"The Studio\".",
"Annie Chandler Annie Chandler may refer to:",
"Anne Belle Stone Anne Belle Stone or Anna Belle Stone (1874–1949) was an American artist known for her floral still-lifes. She was one of the founders of the Women Painters of Washington. Stone was born in 1874 in Des Moines, Iowa, and moved to Seattle, Washington, in 1889. She studied at the University of Washington and Scripps College. In 1930 she helped found the Women Painters of Washington. She was also a member of the National League of American Pen Women and the Northwest Watercolor Society. She exhibited primarily on the West Coast. From 1931 through 1950 she exhibited her work at the Western Washington Fair. Stone also exhibited works at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor, the Henry Art Gallery, the Oakland Art Gallery, the Portland Art Museum, and the Seattle Art Museum Her work has been characterized as American Impressionist. Stone died in 1949 in Seattle, Washington."
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"no"
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Did Hedley Hazelden and Elga Balk share the same nationality?
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Elga Balk Helga Balk is a South African pair skater. With partner Gavin MacPherson, she won the silver medal at the 1977 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, which were known as the "I.S.U. Junior Figure Skating Championships" at the time.
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"Kim Elgie Michael Kelsey \"Kim\" Elgie (born 6 March 1933) is a former South African cricketer who played in three Test matches in the 1961–62 series against New Zealand. He was also a rugby union footballer, who played for Scotland eight times as a centre while he was studying at the University of St Andrews in the 1950s. He hit his top first-class score of 162 not out for Natal against Border in the 1959–60 season in a match in which 38 wickets fell for 418 runs.",
"Hazelden (surname) Hazelden is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:",
"Alf Hagon Alf Hagon (born 3 October 1931 in Ilford, England) is a former motorcycle speedway rider who later competed in Grasstrack. He manufactured off-road competition frames, forks and other components, later developing into the production of shock absorbers, specialising in modern-replicas of the traditional Girlings used as original equipment and replacements for historic motorcycles. Over a 12-year career in Speedway, he rode for six teams. In four consecutive years - 1961, 1962, 1963, and 1964 - he rode for teams that ended their seasons at the bottom of the table. He later found regular success when competing in Grasstrack. When riding in Grasstrack, Hagon started to develop a racing machine, with the assistance of Essex motorcycle dealer and competition sponsor Tom Kirby, creating a lightweight bike powered by a JAP engine. In 1958 he established a business building speedway and grasstrack bike frames in his mother's garden shed, but progress was interrupted in 1960 when he went on tour in Australia with the national England team. He represented England on four occasions. On his return, the business transferred to Leyton, East London. This proved successful with his bikes in good demand and he retired from racing in 1965 to concentrate on the business. However, Hagon had become involved in sprinting, appearing at the first International Dragfest in 1964, on his lightweight JAP-engined bike. Hagon's approach to weight-reduction included a custom-made frame also containing the engine oil, his own grasstrack front forks and brake intended for lightweight category machines, dispensing with the gearbox and seat, and avoidance of a supercharger, resulting in a wet weight of . For the 1964 Dragfest, a competition against Americans who were using large capacity, double-engined machines – he fitted oversize pistons and cylinders to take advantage of a maximum engine-size dispensation by the ACU, raising the J.A.P. engine's capacity from 996 cc to 1,100 cc, and the power output from 84 bhp to 91 bhp, compared to a blown Vincent's 130 bhp. In July 1967, riding a purpose-built sprint-bike powered by a supercharged V-Twin 1,260 cc JAP engine, he became the first rider to record a sub-10 second time with a one-way-only 9.",
"Alfred Emden Alfred Emden may refer to:",
"Hedda Nova Hedda Nova (1899–1981) was a Russian-born American film actress. Born in Odessa, Nova received her schooling at a Parisian convent. Nova appeared in 16 films, mostly westerns, from 1917 through 1926. \"The Spitfire of Seville\" (1919) provided her first starring role. In 1926, she was featured in a six-episode series of two-reel jungle films produced by Chesterfield. Nova was married to Paul Hurst, an actor, director, and screenwriter.",
"Ebba From Ebba Ingegerd From Svahn (23 October 1915, Helsinki – 25 November 2006, Helsinki) was a Finnish track athlete. She was one of the first four female Finnish Olympic athletes in athletics. From qualified for the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin in the 100 meter and 4 × 100 meter relay events.",
"Doris Emdin Doris Lucy Emdin (1905-1967), was a female English international table tennis player. After being eliminated in the first round of the singles event of the 1934 World Championships, she reached the quarter-finals of the 1938 World Championships in the same event. Her younger sister Dora Emdin was also a notable table tennis international. She married Sidney Hearn in 1956 and died in 1967.",
"Hedda Dyson Elizabeth Geertruida Agatha Dyson ( Weersma, 15 January 1897 – 17 October 1951), known as Hedda Dyson, was a New Zealand journalist and magazine editor. She was born in Ginneken, Netherlands on 15 January 1897.",
"Henriette Grové Hester Henriette Grové(née Venter) (September 26, 1922 - December 15, 2009) is a South African writer of African origin. She was married to the literary critic A.P. Grové. She is best known for her short stories and her plays. She is one of the few writers to have won the Hertzog Prize in multiple categories. Radiodramas are \"Die Glasdeur\" and \"Die Goeie Jaar\". A drama \"Die Bokamer\" . A short story is \"Swart Haan\", collected in for instance \"Moderne Afrikaanse Verhaalkuns\", byeengebring en toeglig deur Dr. F.E.F. Malherbe.",
"Elspeth Hay Elspeth Hay, also known by her married name Elspeth Graham, (born 1929/30) is a British former sprinter who won a gold medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay at the 1950 European Athletics Championships. Hay was scheduled to compete at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, but was injured in training prior to the event. In 1950, she competed in the European Athletics Championships; in doing so, she became the first Scottish person to compete at the European Athletics Championships. She came fifth in the individual 100 metres event, and was a member of the gold medal-winning Great Britain 4 x 100 metres relay team. In the same year, she won the women's 100-yard dash event at the Edinburgh Highland games. After her retirement, Hay volunteered almost 40 years for the Women's Royal Voluntary Service. She also worked as a tour guide for a stately home. Graham ran in Balbeggie as part of the torch relay prior to the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. At the time, she was living in Perth."
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"no"
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Who is the stepmother of Douglas Gresham?
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Douglas Gresham Douglas Howard Gresham (born November 10, 1945) is an American British stage and voice-over actor, biographer, film producer, and executive record producer. He is one of the two stepsons of C. S. Lewis. Gresham was born in New York City, the son of writers William Lindsay Gresham and Joy Davidman. William Gresham was the author of "Nightmare Alley", the classic of American noir literature, while Joy Davidman was best known for her book "Smoke on the Mountain", about the Ten Commandments. The couple were separated in 1954, and Joy moved to England with her two sons. His mother was of Jewish descent. Gresham's mother had become friends with C. S. Lewis through correspondence, and the friendship blossomed, eventually leading to marriage in 1956. Gresham's mother died of cancer in 1960, and Lewis continued to raise Douglas and his elder brother David. (Lewis had adopted the boys when he married, and "The Horse and His Boy" is dedicated to them both.) At Lewis's death in 1963, his estate went to his brother Major Warren Hamilton Lewis. The Major in turn passed the estate to Douglas and David ten years later. Douglas Gresham acknowledged in a 15 November 2005 interview on NPR that he and his brother are estranged, although in a 4 December 2005 interview he did say that they are in email contact. Douglas Gresham is a Christian, as were Lewis and his mother, while David returned to the Orthodox Judaism of their mother's ancestors while still a child in Lewis's home. Lewis made an effort to find kosher food for him. In 2020, Gresham revealed that his brother David had died several years earlier in a Swiss mental hospital and that his uncle, Howard Davidman, had diagnosed him with paranoid schizophrenia as a young man. Gresham hosted Focus on the Family's radio adaptations of his stepfather's most famous works, and his interest in media versions thereof was later shown again when he was named co-producer for the series of theatrical films adaptations of "The Chronicles of Narnia"; he also made a cameo in the as a radio newscaster, the as a "Telmarine crier" and the as a slaver.
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"Gresham, Oregon Gresham ( ) is a city located in Multnomah County, Oregon, in the United States of America, immediately east of Portland, Oregon. It is considered a suburb within the Greater Portland Metropolitan area. Though it began as a settlement in the mid-1800s, it was not officially incorporated as a city until 1905; it was named after Walter Quintin Gresham, the American Civil War general and United States Secretary of State. The city's early economy was sustained largely by farming, and by the mid-20th century the city experienced a population boom, growing from 4,000 residents to over 10,000 between 1960 and 1970. The population was 105,594 at the 2010 census, making Gresham the fourth largest city in Oregon. The area now known as Gresham was first settled in 1851 by brothers Jackson and James Powell, who claimed land under the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850. They were soon joined by other pioneer families, and the area came to be known as Powell's Valley. In 1884, a local merchant petitioned the United States Post Office Department for a post office in his store, and offered to name it after Postmaster General Walter Q. Gresham if his request was granted. At the same time, other members of the community secured a post office called \"Campground\", another name for the area, referencing the religious camp meeting ground located there and the valley's usefulness as a stop-off for travelers on their way to Portland. Once the Post Office Department realized its mistake, it revoked the Campground post office. Gresham was incorporated in 1905, the year of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition; its population at the time was 365. Lewis Shattuck, son of a pioneer family, was the first mayor. The town's economy was fueled largely by farming, including berries, grapes, and vegetables. At the time, trains ran between Gresham and Portland on an hourly basis. Gresham's early settlers would go on to form the outlying communities of Boring, Sandy, Fairview, and Estacada. Gresham's city library, which began as a small book collection in the town's general store, was officially established as the Gresham Branch Public Library in 1913 with a grant from the Andrew Carnegie library fund.",
"James Gresham (MP) James Gresham (b Fulham 1617 – d Haslemere 1689) was an English politician in the second half of the 17th century. Gresham came to live in Haslemere in 1650. He was called to the bar in 1652. He became a JP in 1660 and in 1676 he presented an almshouse to the town.",
"1539), brother of Sir Michael Dormer, Lord Mayor of London in 1541. Most of Gresham's twelve children died without issue, but the senior line of Gresham's descendants continued until the early nineteenth century. The 17th century Greshams sat as Members of Parliament, loyally supported King Charles I throughout the Civil War, and suffered from the victory of Cromwell. In 1643 the house at Titsey was commandeered by the Parliamentarians, but at the time of the Restoration in 1660 the new King Charles II created the head of the family, Marmaduke Gresham, a baronet as a reward for the family's support for the Royalist cause. This title died out with Sir John Gresham, sixth and last Baronet, of Limpsfield (who died in 1801). However, the last Sir John Gresham's daughter and heiress, Katherine Maria Gresham, married William Leveson-Gower, first cousin of the Marquess of Stafford, later the first Duke of Sutherland, and through Katherine Maria the Titsey estate continued to be owned by Sir John Gresham's descendants until the death of Thomas Leveson Gower in 1992. By his will, Leveson Gower set up the \"Titsey Foundation\", a charitable trust with the aim of preserving the estate for the benefit of the nation. Nevertheless, the first Sir John Gresham's line continues in the descendants of his third son, another John Gresham, who was the ancestor of the Greshams of Fulham, Albury, and Haslemere. In 1555, shortly before his death, Gresham founded Gresham's School in his home town of Holt, Norfolk, placing its endowments under the stewardship of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers, which has continued to carry out the task entrusted to it until the present day. The grasshopper is the crest above Sir John Gresham's coat of arms. It can be seen at Titsey Place, his country house, and is used by Gresham's School, which he founded.",
" The foundation of the Royal Exchange is the background of Thomas Heywood's play: \"If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody part 2\", in which a Lord extols the quality of the building when asked if he has ever seen \"a goodlier frame\": In 1544 he married Anne Ferneley, widow of Sir William Read, a London merchant. By his wife he had an only son who predeceased him. He also had an illegitimate daughter who married Sir Nathaniel Bacon (\"c.\" 1546–1622), half-brother of Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Albans, becoming \"Anne, Lady Bacon\". Gresham died suddenly, apparently of apoplexy, on 21 November 1579 and was buried at St Helen's Church, Bishopsgate in the City of London. Apart from some small sums to various charities, Gresham bequeathed the bulk of his property (consisting of estates in London and around England giving an income of more than 2,300 pounds a year) to his widow and her heirs, with the stipulation that after her death his own house in Bishopsgate Street and the rents from the Royal Exchange should be vested in the Corporation of London and the Mercers Company, for the purpose of instituting a college in which seven professors should read lectures, one each day of the week, in astronomy, geometry, physic, law, divinity, rhetoric and music. Thus, Gresham College, the first institution of higher learning in London, came to be established in 1597. Gresham's Law (stated simply as: \"Bad money drives out good\") takes its name from him (although others, including the astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus, had recognised the concept for years) because he urged Queen Elizabeth to restore the debased currency of England. However, Sir Thomas never formulated anything like \"Gresham's Law,\" which was the 1857 conception of Henry Dunning Macleod, an economist with a knack for reading into a text that which was not written. The Gresham family crest is: \"On a Mount Vert a Grasshopper Or\", (a golden grasshopper on a green mound); it is displayed by Gresham College, which he founded, and also forms the weathervane on the Royal Exchange in the City of London, also founded by him in 1565.",
"Gresham High School Gresham High School may refer to:",
"Marmaduke Gresham Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 1st Baronet (ca. 162714 April 1696) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1660 and from 1685 to 1689. Gresham was the son of Sir Edward Gresham, of Limpsfield and Titsey, Surrey, and the grandson of Sir Thomas Gresham. He was baptised at Betchworth on 24 January 1627. He matriculated from King's College, Cambridge in autumn 1645. In 1660, Gresham was elected as one of the members of parliament for East Grinstead, sitting in the Convention Parliament. He was created Baronet of Lympsfield in the County of Surrey on 31 July 1660. In 1685 he was elected as member for Bletchingley and held the seat until 1689. He married Alice Corbet, a daughter of Richard Corbet, Bishop of Norwich. Gresham died at Gresham College, London, at the age of 69 and was buried at Titsey. He divided his estate of Lovested Down, Tatsfield, between his son Charles and his daughter Alice.",
"Gresham, Missouri Gresham is an extinct town in Polk County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. A post office called Gresham was established in 1885, and remained in operation until 1900. The community has the name of Walter Q. Gresham, 33rd United States Secretary of State.",
"Granville William Gresham Leveson-Gower Granville William Gresham Leveson-Gower (25 February 1838 – 30 May 1895) was a British Liberal Party politician. Leveson-Gower was the son of William and Emily Josephine Eliza (née Doyle) Leveson-Gower. In 1861, he married Sophia Leigh, daughter of Chandos and Margarette (née Willes) Leigh, and they had at least 10 children: Margaret Emily (1862–1948); Ronald William (1863–1889); Granville Charles (1865–1948); Ethel Sophie (1866–1950); Frederick Archibald (1871–1946); Evelyn Marmaduke (1872–1938); Henry Dudley (1873–1954); Cecil Octavius (1875–1937); Clement Edward (1876–1939); and Katherine Ursula (1878–1963). Leveson-Gower was elected Liberal MP for Reigate at a by-election in 1863—caused by the succession of William Monson to the peerage as Lord Monson—and held the seat until 1866 when he was unseated due to extensive bribery in the seat. The seat was later disenfranchised under the Reform Act 1867.",
" \"He went to work to take care of his young family ... I wonder how much it hurt him to make that decision. So much that he never, ever told us he was signed by the Cubs.\" During World War II, Gresham served in the United States Army Air Corps, the precursor to the United States Air Force. He considered his military service as important as his success in journalism. In 1944, Gresham married the former Mary Eleanor Ryan (July 4, 1925 – March 5, 2001). She was a Roman Catholic, and he was a Baptist; they wed in a Methodist Church in Nashville, Tennessee while he was in between military assignments. In their first thirteen years of marriage, they had a different address each Christmas. Mary became an excellent cook by necessity and assisted her husband on his assignments with the use of her memory, note-taking, and photographic skills. The Greshams had three children, including Thomas Hamilton \"Tom\" Gresham, host of weekly radio program \"Gun Talk\". Gresham worked for the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and thereafter edited the \"Louisiana Conservationist\" magazine. He was the former outdoors editor of \"The Shreveport Times\" too. Gresham succeeded former Governor Joe Foss of South Dakota as the host of \"The American Sportsman\". He was thereafter joined by Curt Gowdy as co-host. Gresham further hosted \"Shooting Sports America\", sponsored by Chevy Trucks on the ESPN network. For twenty-six years, he was the shooting editor of \"Sports Afield\" magazine. He was also published in \"Sports Illustrated\" and \"Gentleman's Quarterly\". He appeared in television commercials for Miller Lite Beer. In an interview with U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Gresham reported that Reagan, as a fledgling radio announcer, had once used a Colt pistol to save a nurse in Des Moines, Iowa from a mugging on a street. The nurse later confirmed the story but had not known that it was Reagan who had saved her. Gresham was among the first to sound the alarm about the loss of wetlands in Louisiana. He worked with Ray Scott, the founder of the Bass Anglers Sportsman Society, to halt the cheating that had previously haunted tournament bass fishing. Gresham's \"Kiss the Land Goodbye\" was one of the early works about vanishing wetlands.",
" Gresham built a new house there near to the parish church, on the site of an older house. He was Lord Mayor of London in 1547. Sir John Gresham's heir was William Gresham, whose son was Sir Thomas Gresham (died 1630), whose son and heir was Sir Edward Gresham. The house and estate passed through several generations of the Gresham family, who were created Baronets by Charles II at the time of his Restoration in 1660. The successive baronets were Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 1st Baronet (1627-1696), Sir Edward Gresham, 2nd Baronet (1649-1709), Sir Charles Gresham, 3rd Baronet (1660-1718), Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 4th Baronet (1700-1742), Sir Charles Gresham, 5th Baronet (died 1750), and Sir John Gresham, 6th and last Baronet (1735-1801). Through the marriage of the heiress of the last Gresham, the house passed to the Leveson Gowers, a branch of the family of the Dukes of Sutherland. A Tudor house on the site was demolished and rebuilt by the last Gresham baronet in the 18th century, then in 1826 was given new fronts designed by William Atkinson. A tower by Philip Charles Hardwick was added in 1856. John Preston Neale's \"Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen, in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland\" (1821) notes that \"The Mansion... stands in a beautiful dell formed by a range of lofty chalk hills sheltering it from the north.\" \"A Topographical History of Surrey\" (1844) says of the house - Many of the Uvedales are buried in the garden of Titsey Place, which contains the former parish graveyard. The last Gresham of Titsey pulled down the ancient parish church in 1776 and incorporated its site into his park. In 1865, a large yew-tree marked the location of the former church. Sir Henry Gresham Leveson Gower (1873–1954), who was born at Titsey Place, was England cricket captain in 1909-1910."
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"Joy Davidman"
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Where was the place of death of the director of film The Bad Man (1923 Film)?
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The Bad Man (1923 film) The Bad Man is an American silent film western drama with prominently featured satirical and comedic elements. The film was directed by Edwin Carewe, who produced it for his own motion picture company and adapted the scenario from the play of the same name by Porter Emerson Browne. The play had opened at Broadway's Comedy Theatre in August 1920, and ran for a very successful 342 performances, closing in June 1921. The film version, from Edwin Carewe Productions, was released by Associated First National Pictures on October 8, 1923. The title role was played by the star of the play's Broadway and touring productions, Holbrook Blinn, and the other leading parts filled by Jack Mulhall, Walter McGrail and Enid Bennett. The titular character, a Mexican outlaw named Pancho Lopez, bore an undisguised resemblance, both in name and personality, to Pancho Villa, a pre-eminent Mexican Revolutionary general. Villa was in the news before and during the play's run and his assassination on July 20, two-and-a-half months before the film's release, appeared in all the headlines. Nine years earlier a supporting actress in "The Bad Man", Teddy Sampson, played one of Pancho Villa's two sisters in the 1914 Mutual Film feature, "The Life of General Villa". The plotline has Lopez (Holbrook Blinn) and his band of outlaws living from the proceeds gained as a result of theft and confiscation of property. One of the victims is rancher Gilbert Jones (Jack Mulhall), whose cattle losses are pushing him to the edge of bankruptcy. Lopez prepares to deprive Jones of the remainder of his cattle and valuables, and kidnap his beloved former sweetheart (Enid Bennett), who is now married to heartless loan shark Morgan Pell (Walter McGrail). Lopez recognizes Jones as the man who, years earlier, saved his life. Determined to show his gratitude, the powerful bandit robs the rapacious bank which, in cahoots with Pell, cheats and exploits the locals, and gives the money to Jones. When Pell arrives to foreclose on Jones' oil-rich ranch, Lopez, addressing him as "Mr.
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"Hoodman Blind Hoodman Blind is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by John Ford. It is a remake of a 1913 film of the same name directed by James Gordon and a 1916 William Farnum Fox feature titled \"A Man of Sorrow\" and based on the play \"Hoodman Blind\". With no prints of \"Hoodman Blind\" in any film archives, it is a lost film.",
"The Girl from Hell The Girl from Hell () is a 1923 German silent drama film directed by Frederic Zelnik and starring Lya Mara, Carl Auen and Harald Paulsen. It premiered at the Marmorhaus in Berlin. The film's sets were designed by the art director Fritz Lederer.",
"The Last Moment (1923 film) The Last Moment is a 1923 American silent horror film directed by J. Parker Read Jr. and starring Henry Hull, Doris Kenyon and Louis Wolheim.",
"Thundergate Thundergate is a 1923 American drama film directed by Joseph De Grasse and written by Perry N. Vekroff. The film stars Owen Moore, Virginia Brown Faire, Edwin B. Tilton, Sylvia Breamer, Robert McKim, and Richard Cummings. The film was released on October 15, 1923, by Associated First National Pictures. A print of \"Thundergate\" is held by the Archives Du Film Du CNC in Bois d'Arcy.",
"John van den Broek John van den Broek (1895 – 29 June 1918) was a Dutch born cinematographer. He is remembered primarily for his work on the films of Maurice Tourneur. Van den Broek died at 23 while filming the Tourneur directed film \"Woman\" in 1918. According to Tourneur's biographer Harry Waldman, Van den Broek was on a cliff in Maine filming some large waves when he got caught in a series of waves that carried him out to sea. His body was never recovered.",
"Lost in a Big City Lost in a Big City is a 1923 American silent drama film directed by George Irving and starring John Lowell, Charles Byer and Jane Thomas.",
"The Ravine of Death The Ravine of Death or Cage of Death (German:Die Schlucht des Todes) is a 1923 German silent thriller film directed by Luciano Albertini, Albert-Francis Bertoni and Max Obal. It starred Albertini, Lya De Putti and Hermann Picha.",
"Darkness (1923 film) Darkness is a 1923 British silent crime film directed by George A. Cooper.",
"The Barnyard The Barnyard is a 1923 film featuring Oliver Hardy and directed by Larry Semon.",
"Bavu Bavu is a 1923 silent American drama film directed by Stuart Paton, starring Wallace Beery in the title role, and written by Albert Kenyon and Raymond L. Schrock based upon a play by Earl Carroll. The film is a period piece involving Bolsheviks and the Russian Revolution. According to the Motion Picture News: A Russian revolutionist incites the peasantry to burn the city. Mischka, a former servant in the nobelman's home, is commissioner of licenses under the new administration. He loves the princess and in order to get her out of the country it is necessary to have the passport sealed with the revolutionist's ring. A fight follows, but Mischka escapes with the girl while Bavu drowns in the pursuit. With no prints of \"Bavu\" found in any film archives, it is a lost film."
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[
"Hollywood"
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Which film has the director born later, Once Upon A Time In Anatolia or Git Along Little Dogies (Film)?
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Git Along Little Dogies (film) Git Along Little Dogies is a 1937 American Western film directed by Joseph Kane and starring Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, and the Maple City Four. Written by Dorrell and Stuart E. McGowan, the film is about a singing cowboy who gets caught up in a war between oilmen and cattle ranchers, taking the side of the ranchers until he learns that oil will bring a railroad to town. The film is also known as "Serenade of the West" in the United Kingdom. When Doris Maxwell (Judith Allen) starts drilling for oil, cowboy Gene Autry (Gene Autry) tries to stop the drilling, believing the territory's water supply will be ruined. Doris' father, bank president Maxwell (William Farnum), embezzled $25,000 to support the drilling project. Doris and Gene's fight heats up after he shoots out the tires on her car and she steals his horse, Champion. In an attempt to discredit Gene, Doris, who runs a radio station above Sing Low's cafe, broadcasts him on a program sponsored by the oil company. When Gene discovers the trick, he sets out in a rage to find her. George Wilkins (Weldon Heyburn), who is in charge of the oil well drilling, takes Doris to the drilling site and tell her the well is dry and he needs additional funds from her father to bring the well in. Doris doesn't know that Wilkins is actually trying to swindle her father by getting him to pay for all of the equipment while he stalls the drilling. Wilkins intends to take over the lease on the profitable land when the bank's lease runs out. While taking the payroll to the drilling site, Wilkins and Doris are held up by two thieves, who are actually Wilkins' henchmen. Gene comes to the rescue and grudgingly returns the money to Doris, who continues on to the drilling site. Wilkins reprimands his men for getting caught and then lets them go. Doris and Gene return to the bank, where they discover Maxwell has tried to commit suicide after receiving a letter notifying him that the bank examiner would be arriving soon. Protecting Maxwell from embezzlement charges, Gene makes it seem as if Maxwell was shot during a robbery. Sometime later, Gene learns that the railroad will go through the town if the oil comes in, and he informs Wilkins that he will publicly support the drilling.
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"Git Along! \"Git Along!\" is a science fiction short story by American writer L. Sprague de Camp, part of his \"Viagens Interplanetarias\" series. It is the second (chronologically) set on the planet Osiris, as well as the second to feature the interstellar con-man Darius Koshay. It was first published in the magazine \"Astounding\" in the issue for August, 1950. It first appeared in book form in the anthology \"The Outer Reaches\", edited by August Derleth, published in hardcover by Pellegrini and Cudahy in 1951, and was gathered together with other \"Viagens\" stories in the collection \"The Continent Makers and Other Tales of the Viagens\", published in hardcover by Twayne Publishers in 1953, and in paperback by Signet Books in 1971. The story has been translated into Portuguese, Dutch, Italian and German. Con man Darius Koshay, stranded in the Uranus spaceport fleeing an arrest warrant from Earth, falls in with promoter Moritz Gloppenheimer, who hopes to open a dude ranch on the planet Osiris. Plying him with drink until the promoter loses consciousness, Koshay steals his identity, papers and scheme, leaving his victim to be arrested as \"Koshay\". After the voyage to Osiris he puts Gloppenheimer's plan into action, forming a syndicate with Shishirhe, Yathasia and Fessahen, the three Osirian mayors of Cefef Aqh, for the purpose. Within a Terran year, the ranch is operational and all is going well for Koshay, aside from some unwelcome attention from Afasiè, a female Osirian besotted with both the ranch and its operator. Then he discovers that the vengeful Gloppenheimer has followed him to Osiris and is starting a rival operation, the \"Cefef Aqh Hunt Club\". Soon one of the ranch's round-ups gets mixed up with one of Gloppenheimer's hunts, and the Terran enemies come to blows, with Koshay's gun accidentally discharging. Two of the Cefef Aqh mayors, disaffected from Koshay and present with the hunting party, promptly try and convict him on the spot for the attempted murder of Gloppenheimer; Koshay's patron Shishirhe protests but is outvoted.",
"A Little Vicious A Little Vicious is a 1991 American short documentary film directed by Immy Humes about a dog in Connecticut about to be killed for biting people, until animal trainer Vicki Hearne steps in to help. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.",
"Dags (film) Dags is a 1998 Australian comedy film centring on the adventures of a group of friends, directed, produced and written by Murray Fahey. Fahey wrote the film in three weeks. It was shot in nine and a half days using a house that acted as four locations in one.",
"Togan Gökbakar Togan Gökbakar (born 29 May 1984) is a Turkish film director. Togan Gökbakar studied in the Cinema and TV Department at Bilgi University and his 2004 graduate short film \"Run Daddy Run\" was shown at the If Istanbul and Altın Koza film festivals where it won a prize in the student category. His first features was the 2006 Turkish horror film \"Gen\" from a story idea by Alper Mestçi and his older brother Şahan Gökbakar, who also made a cameo appearance in the film. He went on to direct his brother in a series of successful Turkish comedy films, starting with \"Recep İvedik\" in 2008.",
"Metin Hüseyin Metin Hüseyin is a Turkish-Cypriot-British television and film director. Hüseyin's debut film, \"Tight Trousers\", was nominated for a BAFTA Film Award for Best Short Film in 1989, and in 1998 he received an RTS award and a British Academy Television Award nomination for \"Common as Muck\", and \"The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling\" won three BAFTAs. In 2002, he directed the film \"Anita and Me\". Hüseyin has also directed episodes of various television series, including \"The All New Alexei Sayle Show\", \"Randall and Hopkirk\", \"Kingdom\", \"Merlin\", \"Shameless\", and \"Krypton\".",
"Pups (film) Pups is a 1999 American independent crime drama film written and directed by Ash, and stars Mischa Barton, Burt Reynolds and Cameron Van Hoy. The film centers on two young adolescents that embark on a bank robbery on their way to school. The film premiered at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival on April 18, 1999. The film, although well received critically received a limited release that has been attributed as sensitivity to the Columbine High School massacre that occurred two days after the premiere. Stevie (Van Hoy) finds a gun in his mother's closet, and on his way to school with his girlfriend, Rocky (Barton), decides to use the gun to rob a bank. The police come and surround the building. One FBI agent, Daniel Bender (Reynolds), tries to free the hostages. Initially he is calm and cooperative, giving food, condoms, beer and an MTV reporter by request. \"As the situation furthers, Bender gets frustrated. After several failed attempts at impossible requests, Stevie decides to surrender. Rocky and he leave the guns, money, and hostages in the bank. As the two walk away, Stevie reaches for a flower in his pocket, and a sniper shoots him dead. Bender asks to get that \"mother fucker down from that roof\". The film is set in an unnamed American suburb and was shot in Chatsworth, Los Angeles. It was financed by Japan-based Team Okuyama in October 1998, with the condition that filming would be complete by December of the same year. The film was shot in two weeks in December 1998. The director, Ash noted that the film was timely within the context of real-life crimes during this period, alluding to the Jonesboro shootings; \"The film was a reflection of what was going on in Jonesboro and around the world,\". As well as the controversy of the Columbine killings, the release of the film was complicated by the arrest of one of its co-stars, Adam Farrar. Farrar had been arrested in March 1999 on suspicion of attempted murder and making terrorist threats against his girlfriend. The film was well received by critics; it currently holds a 90% 'fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Robert Koehler of \"Variety\" praised the execution of the film \"Applying all the assets of seat-of-your-pants indie filmmaking with few of its deficits, Ash has delivered a sinewy, disturbing sophomore work...",
"Cowboys and Indians (film) Cowboys and Indians is a 2007 American short film starring Britt George, Nana Kagga, Sebastian Rockefeller, Angela Watson for the American Film Institute.",
"Weeping Willow (film) Weeping Willow () is a 2014 Turkish animated short film directed by Ethem Onur Bilgiç, and produced by Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University. It is an animated free adaption of the Nâzım Hikmet poem, \"Salkımsöğüt\". There was a man; who fought through his entire life. He rode from one attack to another, marched on his horse. He was a brave soldier, fought with his pride. But maybe, it was time to watch the soldiers going along the setting sun under the shade of Weeping Willow.",
"Little Happiness Little Happiness () is a 2014 British-Turkish drama film directed by Nihat Seven. It was selected as the British entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, but was not nominated.",
"Ay Lav Yu Ay Lav Yu is a 2010 Turkish comedy film, written and directed by Sermiyan Midyat, about a young man who having completed his education returns to his home village along with his American bride-to-be. The film, which went on nationwide general release across Turkey on , laid claim to various firsts for Turkish cinema including; first movie to feature Turkish, Kurdish, Syriac and English dialogue; first movie to show the blend of different religions in East Turkey; and first comedy with an international ensemble to look at the 9/11 attacks. Filming took place from 14 July to 10 August 2009 on location in Hasankeyf, Nurlu, Izbirak and Istanbul, Turkey. Yusuf Ağa, the landlord of the tiny southeast Anatolian village of Tinne, keeps sending petitions to high level state officials to make the voice of his village heard by the central government. Years ago, Yusuf abandoned his son, İbrahim, in the courtyard of a university so that he could get a good education and become an important man. There, İbrahim was found by Father Hana, who raised him and gave him a good life. Now İbrahim has turned 30, and he returns to his village along with his girlfriend, Jessica. But will the tiny village of Tinne become the new home of İbrahim and Jessica? SYNOPSIS In a forgotten part of the Earth, in a deserted land in this forgotten part, is a simple and lonely village ‘Tinne’. Almost no one knows about its existence, except the beaming Sun maybe. This land is Tinne, that doesn't even exist on the national map, that has no school, roadway or clinic. No dweller has identification paper over there. ‘Existence’ or ‘nonexistence’ is the one and only question. Its destiny may as well be the victim of its name's definition in Kurdish language, which means ‘non-existent’. Tinne, a village abandoned to its own destiny in the middle of Mesopotamia, in the Southeast of Turkey, has been intentionally or unintentionally ‘forgotten’ by the government for years. Its inhabitants don't even have any record in the civil registry. Neither Tinne, nor any of its people exist officially, whereas Yusuf Agha and its whole family have been living in this land for over a century. Even though Yusuf Agha constantly tries to get in touch with the government, he cannot get a reply to any of his letters."
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[
"Once Upon A Time In Anatolia"
] |
When is Stefania Craxi's father's birthday?
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Stefania Craxi Stefania Gabriella Anastasia Craxi (born 25 October 1960 in Milan) is an Italian politician, daughter of the former Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi and sister of Bobo Craxi. Stefania Craxi was an entrepreneur in the world of television, she left her career as a television producer in 2000. She entered politics in 2006, when she was elected MP with Forza Italia. She was re-elected MP in 2008, among the ranks of The People of Freedom. She also served as Undersecretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Berlusconi IV Cabinet, from 2008 to 2011. In 2011 she left the PdL and founded the Italian Reformists. In the general election of 2018 she was candidate for the Senate in the uninominal constituency of Monza-Seregno (supported by the centre-right coalition) and she was elected with the 46.79% of the vote. She married twice: to entrepreneur Renato Neri, with whom she had her son Federico (1987); and to Marco Bassetti, former president of the television distribution company Endemol, now in charge of Banijay, with whom she had daughters Benedetta and Anita (1991).
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"Francesco Stefani (film director) Francesco Stefani (January 23, 1923 in Offenburg – November 11, 1989 in Munich) was a German film director of Italian descent. Stefani lived in the Federal Republic of Germany and worked in the 1950s, mainly at children's film productions. He became famous with the film The Singing Ringing Tree, for which he led as a guest at the DEFA (GDR) Director. In 1980 he was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit, in 1983 the Bavarian Order of Merit.",
"Stefani Stefani may refer to:",
" Crețu was also an OSCE observer to the parliamentary election of March 2005 in Moldova and to the general election of 2006 in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 2005, Crețu was appointed a member of the Romanian parliamentary delegation to the European Parliament. She was elected Member of the European Parliament (MEP), sitting with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats on January 1, 2007 following the accession of Romania to the European Union, being re-elected as an MEP in 2009 and 2014. In 2013, she was elected Vice-President of the Romanian Social Democratic Party (PSD). Crețu announced on 17 January 2019 that she would be a candidate in the European Parliament election on behalf of the party Pro Romania. She was at the second position in the list after Victor Ponta. She joined Pro Romania in March 2019. Her father, Traian Crețu (1937–1995), was Professor of Physics at the Politehnica University of Bucharest. Her mother, Verginia Crețu is a child development psychologist and was a professor at the University of Bucharest. In 2012, Crețu married Ovidiu Rogoz, a Romanian businessman, at the New Church of St Spyridon in Bucharest. Personal e-mails Cretu had exchanged with then U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell were accessed by the hacker Guccifer, who broke into Powell’s personal email account and posted a link to some of the correspondence on Powell’s Facebook page. Powell said in a statement that he had stayed in touch with Cretu by email since stepping down as secretary of state in 2005, and that \"over time the emails became of a very personal nature, but did not result in an affair.” He added that \"those types of emails ended a few years ago. There was no affair then and there is not one now.”",
"Craxi I Cabinet The Craxi I Cabinet was the cabinet of the Italian government which held office from 4 August 1983 until 1 August 1986, for a total of 1,093 days, or 2 years, 11 months and 28 days.",
"Stefania Turkewich Stefania Turkewich-Lukianovych (April 25, 1898 – April 8, 1977) was a Ukrainian composer, pianist, and musicologist, recognized as Ukraine's first woman composer. Her works were banned in Ukraine by the Soviets. Stefania was born in Lviv, Austria-Hungary. Her grandfather (Lev Turkevich), and her father (Ivan Turkevich) were priests. Her mother Sofia Kormoshiv (Кормошів) was a pianist and studied with Karol Mikuli and Vilém Kurz, and also accompanied the young Solomiya Krushelnytska. The whole family was musical and everyone played an instrument. Stefania played piano, harp, and harmonium. Later, the composer remembered her childhood and her love of music: Stefania began her music studies with Vasyl Barvinsky. From 1914 to 1916, she studied in Vienna as pianist with Vilém Kurz. After World War I, she studied with Adolf Chybiński at the University of Lviv, and also attended his lectures on music theory at the Lviv Conservatory. In 1919 she wrote her first musical work – the Liturgy (Літургію), which was performed several times in St. George's Cathedral in Lviv. In 1921 she studied with Guido Adler at the University of Vienna and Joseph Marx at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna, from which she graduated in 1923 with a Teacher's Diploma. In 1925 she married Robert Lisovskyi and travelled with him to Berlin where she lived from 1927 to 1930 and studied with Arnold Schoenberg and Franz Schreker. During this period, in 1927, her daughter Zoya (Зоя) was born. In 1930 she travelled to Prague in Czechoslovakia, studied with Zdeněk Nejedlý at Charles University, and with Otakar Šín at the Prague Conservatory. She also studied composition with Vítězslav Novák at the music academy. In autumn 1933 she taught piano and became an accompanist at the Prague Conservatory. In 1934 she defended her doctoral dissertation on the topic of Ukrainian folklore in Russian operas. She received her doctorate in musicology in 1934 from the Ukrainian Free University in Prague.",
"Paolo Pillitteri Gian Paolo Pillitteri (born 5 December 1940) is a former Italian Democratic Socialist Party politician and film critic. He was also affiliated with the Italian Socialist Party from 1976 to 1994. He was born in Sesto Calende, Province of Varese, Lombardy. He served in the Chamber of Deputies of Italy in Legislature IX (1983–1987) and Legislature XI (1992–1994). He was mayor of Milan from 1986 to 1992. He is married to Rosilde Craxi, sister of the former leader of the Italian Socialist Party, Bettino Craxi.",
"Guido Crosetto Guido Crosetto (born 19 September 1963, in Cuneo, Italy) is an Italian businessman and politician, co-founder of Brothers of Italy party. He became internationally famous as an anti-EU austerity and pro-Italexit politician because he strongly opposed the Monti Cabinet since November 2011 when at that time almost all politicians, journalists, economists and public opinion were in favor of EU austerity and strongly against Italexit. Crosetto was President of the Brothers of Italy (FdI) from 21 December 2012 to 4 April 2013. Guido Crosetto comes from a family of entrepreneurs from Cuneo, in Piedmont. Due to his father's death, Crosetto could not finish studies in economy at the University of Turin, which he had been attending: at the University he became a member of the youth wing of the Christian Democracy (DC) and in 1988, at only 25 years, Crosetto became economic advisor of Prime Minister Giovanni Goria. Crosetto from 28 May 1990 to 14 June 2004 was the Mayor of Marene, a small village near Cuneo where he lives, for 3 terms. In the 2001 general election he became a deputy of Forza Italia (FI), the center-right political movement member of EPP and founded by the billionaire and media tycoon Silvio Berlusconi. Crosetto was re-elected in 2006 as deputy and in 2008 he joined the new Berlusconi's party The People of Freedom (PdL) and he was elected again at the Chamber of Deputies. Crosetto served as Undersecretary at the Ministry of Defense in the Berlusconi IV Cabinet (2008-2011) and after Berlusconi's resignation in November 2011, Crosetto criticized the formation of the new cabinet led by pro-austerity economist Mario Monti. He founded in December 2012, with Giorgia Meloni and Ignazio La Russa, Brothers of Italy (FdI), a national conservative party in opposition to the PdL and to the pro-austerity Monti. Candidate for Senate, Crosetto failed the 2013 election because FdI did not passed the threshold at 3% of the electoral law known as \"Porcellum\".",
"Claudio Martelli Claudio Martelli (born 24 September 1943) is an Italian politician. He was the right-hand man of Bettino Craxi, the socialist Prime Minister from 1983–1987. Martelli was born at Gessate, in the province of Milan. He graduated in Philosophy and joined the Italian Socialist Party in 1966. In 1976, he was called by the leader of the party, Bettino Craxi, to continue his career in Rome. He was elected to the Italian Parliament in 1979 and became vice-leader (with Valdo Spini) of the party in 1981. He was also elected for the PSI at the European Parliament in 1984. In 1989, he was nominated as vice-President of the Council and in 1991 became Minister for Justice in both of the governments of Giulio Andreotti (1989–1992). In 1990, the Italian Immigration law known as the Martelli Law was passed in parliament. During Tangentopoli, he ran for the party leadership after the resignation of Bettino Craxi, after Craxi was accused of corruption. However, his candidacy was blown off by his involvement in the 7 million dollar bribe in 1980 and resigned as Minister of Justice. He exited the political world to deal with his judicial cases. In 1997, after concluding his legal battles, he founded \"Mondoperaio\" (former magazine of the PSI). In the same year he was elected to the European Parliament for the Italian Social Democrats. However, in 2000, he left the SDI and joined the Socialist Party – New PSI. He became spokesman for the party but was not elected to the Italian Parliament in 2001 and left the party in 2005. In 2005, for second time, he left the political spectrum and became a presenter of a television political program. In the Tangentopoli scandal, regarding the illicit financing of the Socialist Party, Martelli was sentenced to 8 months in prison in 2000, suspended on probation, after confessing, for having received ₤ 500 million in the case of the Enimont maxi-tangent. According to court documents, Roberto Calvi paid bribes to Martelli during the Banco Ambrosiano affair; however in this case he was not convicted.",
" Its biggest supporters, meanwhile, are the PSI of Riccardo Nencini and various politicians from the centre right, most notably Silvio Berlusconi (a close associate of Craxi in the 1980s), Renato Brunetta, Maurizio Sacconi, Stefano Caldoro and Stefania Craxi, Bettino's daughter. Abroad, Craxi received fulsome praise from figures such as Mário Soares, Ricardo Lagos, Felipe González, Lech Walesa, Ronald Reagan, Sergio Romano (Italian Ambassador in the USA), Renato Ruggiero (Socialist diplomat and former Director of the WTO) and Boris Biancheri (writer and diplomat). Craxism led to a change in the entire nature of European socialism. Together with fellow moderate socialist leaders such as Felipe González, François Mitterrand and Helmut Schmidt, Craxi moved socialism in a direction more favourable to liberal reformism and the market economy. In addition, Craxism later inspired the overhaul and redeveloped policies of Tony Blair's Labour Party in Britain, the PSOE under José Zapatero, and Andreas Papandreou's PASOK in Greece.",
"Cristian Savani Cristian Savani (born 22 February 1982) is an Italian volleyball player, a member of Italy men's national volleyball team in 2001–2013 and Italian club BluVolley Verona, a medalist of the Olympic Games (silver in 2004, bronze in 2012), 2012 Italian Champion, double Chinese Champion (2015, 2016). Cristian Savani in National team and Serie A1 plays since 2001. In the Italian league his debut was in team from Montichiari from which went for two years to Itas Diatec Trentino and first national team match against Bulgaria. Savani was born in Castiglione delle Stiviere, Italy. He is married to Mihaela Travica (Dragan's sister, Ljubomir's daughter). On 4 April 2013 his wife gave a birth to their first child - daughter named Mia."
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[
"24 February 1934"
] |
Are director of film The Pride of Jennico (film) and director of film Dark Blood both from the same country?
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The Pride of Jennico (film) The Pride of Jennico is a lost 1914 silent swashbuckler film directed by J. Searle Dawley. It was produced by Adolph Zukor and released on a State Rights basis. On the Broadway stage, the play starred James K. Hackett, Bertha Galland and Arthur Hoops.
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[
"Folco Quilici Folco Quilici (9 April 1930 – 24 February 2018) was an Italian film director and screenwriter. He directed a total of 22 films between 1952 and his retirement in 2005, including \"Tiko and the Shark\" (). His 1955 film \"L'ultimo paradiso\" won the Silver Bear in the documentary category at the 7th Berlin International Film Festival. Quilici died in Orvieto, Italy of a stroke on 24 February 2018 at the age of 87.",
"David Ondříček David Ondříček (born 23 June 1969) is a Czech film director, screenwriter and producer. His 2012 film \"In the Shadow\" won nine Czech Lions.",
"Jerzy Skolimowski Jerzy Skolimowski (, born 5 May 1938) is a Polish film director, screenwriter, dramatist and actor. A graduate of the prestigious National Film School in Łódź, Skolimowski has directed more than twenty films since his 1960 début \"Oko wykol\" (\"The Menacing Eye\"). In 1967 he was awarded the Golden Bear prize for his film \"Le départ\". Among his other notable films is \"Deep End\" (1970), starring Jane Asher and John Moulder Brown. He lived in Los Angeles for over 20 years where he painted in a figurative, expressionist mode and occasionally acted in films. He returned to Poland, and to film making as a writer and director, after a 17-year hiatus with \"Cztery noce z Anną\" (\"Four Nights with Anna\") in 2008. He received the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement at the 2016 Venice Film Festival. Skolimowski was born in Łódź, Poland, the son of Maria (née Postnikoff) and Stanisław Skolimowski, an architect. He often recognized indications in his work to a childhood ineradicably scarred by the War. As a small child he witnessed the brutalities of war, even having been rescued from the rubble of a bombed-out house in Warsaw. His father, a member of the Polish Resistance, was executed by the Nazis. His mother hid a Jewish family in the house and Skolimowski recalls being required to take candy from the Nazis to maintain appearances. After the war, his mother became the cultural attaché of the Polish embassy in Prague. His fellow pupils at school in Poděbrady, a spa town near Prague, included future film-makers Miloš Forman and Ivan Passer, as well as Václav Havel. Skolimowski was considered as a trouble maker at school as he was the origin of many pranks which angered the authorities. At college he studied ethnography, history and literature and took up boxing, which was also the subject of a feature-length documentary, his first significant film. Skolimowski's interest in jazz and association with composer Krzysztof Komeda brought him into contact with actor Zbigniew Cybulski and directors Andrzej Munk and Roman Polanski. In his early twenties Skolimowski was already a writer, having published several books of poems, short stories and a play.",
"David Flamholc David Flamholc (born 27 September 1974) is a Swedish filmmaker and director. He lives in London and works through his company Caravan Film together with his father Leon Flamholc.",
"Mark Jenkin Mark Jenkin (born 1976) is a Cornish director, editor, screenwriter, cinematographer and producer. He wrote and directed the film \"Bait\" (2019), which earned him a BAFTA Award for Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer. Jenkin won the Frank Copplestone First Time Director Award at The Celtic Film & Television Festival in 2002 for his debut film \"Golden Burn\". He followed this success with documentaries, shorts and low-budget feature films including \"The Man Who Needed a Traffic Light\", \"The Rabbit\" and \" The Lobsterman\", a documentary on the life of Cornish playwright Nick Darke. His 2007 feature film \"The Midnight Drives\" was described by Derek Malcolm, film critic for \"The Evening Standard\" as \"A moving film about parentage with an exceptional performance from Colin Holt at its centre\". In 2020, Jenkin was recognised as a Cornish Bard for his work in promoting Cornwall’s heritage. In 2022, he created two music videos for the band the Smile.",
"Gianni Di Gregorio Gianni Di Gregorio (born 19 February 1949) is an Italian director, screenwriter and actor. Born in Rome, Di Gregorio trained as a stage actor and director in the Drama School of Alessandro Fersen. He started his professional career as a screenwriter in the second half of the 1980s. In the 1990s Di Gregorio started collaborating with Matteo Garrone as a screenwriter, an actor and an assistant director, their most famous work being the 2008 award winning film \"Gomorrah\". He made his directorial debut in 2008, with the critically acclaimed Mid-August Lunch, which he also wrote and starred; he followed that up with three other films in the same vein The Salt of Life (2011), Good for Nothing (2014) & Citizen of the World (2019).",
"Wild Blood (2008 film) Wild Blood (\"Sanguepazzo\") is an Italian film directed in 2008 by Marco Tullio Giordana. This film tells the story of two renowned actors of the Fascist cinema, Luisa Ferida and Osvaldo Valenti, who were supporters of the Italian Social Republic. Accused of collaboration and torture, they were shot by the Partisans on 30 April 1945, after the country was liberated. The movie was included in the \"uncategorized\" group at Cannes Film Festival in 2008.",
"Renato De Maria Renato De Maria (born 1958) is an Italian film director and screenwriter. He directed more than ten films since 1991.",
"The Bloodstained Shadow Solamente nero (\"Only Blackness\"), internationally released as The Bloodstained Shadow, is a 1978 Italian giallo film co-written and directed by Antonio Bido. The film was referred to as \"a fine example of a competent giallo, as it contains all of the requisite elements\". Paul Simpson wrote about the film: \"The pacing goes awry, but Bido uses the unusual setting well and the murders are memorably gory.\" A mysterious stranger strangles a young girl in a field, and the murder goes unsolved. Years later, young Stefano (a college professor) returns home to Venice to visit his brother Don Paolo, a priest who has been ranting against the immoral people in his village...a group of ne'er-do-wells including a gambler, a pedophile/ Count, a fake medium, and an illegal abortionist. One by one, the sinners begin to get murdered, and Stefano tries to uncover the killer before he and his brother become victims themselves. The killer's identity is linked to a child-like painting.",
"David Grieco David Grieco (born 19 September 1951) is an Italian director, screenwriter and former actor. Grandson of Ruggero Grieco, one of the founders of the Italian Communist Party, Grieco began his movie career as an actor and worked with directors such as Franco Zeffirelli and his two mentors Pier Paolo Pasolini and Bernardo Bertolucci. Pasolini, who wanted Grieco as his assistant director, has been the most important source of inspiration for Grieco. At the age of 19, he abandoned his acting career and became a film critic for \"l'Unità\". During his 30s, he started directing documentaries and TV commercials. In 2004 he directed his first feature film \"Evilenko\", starring Malcolm McDowell, while his last film is the 2016 movie \"La macchinazione\", starring Massimo Ranieri as Pier Paolo Pasolini."
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[
"no"
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Where did the director of film The Girl From Mandalay die?
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The Girl from Mandalay The Girl from Mandalay is a 1936 American action film directed by Howard Bretherton and written by Wellyn Totman and Endre Bohem. It is based on the 1931 novel "Tiger Valley" by Reginald Campbell. The film stars Conrad Nagel, Kay Linaker, Donald Cook, Esther Ralston, Harry Stubbs and Reginald Barlow. The film was released on April 20, 1936, by Republic Pictures.
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[
"Gloria Katz Gloria Katz (October 25, 1942 – November 25, 2018) was an American screenwriter and film producer, best known for her association with George Lucas. Along with her husband Willard Huyck, Katz created the screenplays of films including \"American Graffiti\", \"Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom\" and \"Howard the Duck\". Katz was of Jewish descent. Though uncredited, Katz and Huyck edited Lucas's \"Star Wars\" script as they acted as script doctors for Lucas. Katz and Huyck are responsible for much of the humor and development of the iconic Princess Leia in the \"Star Wars\" script. Katz died from ovarian cancer in 2018 at the age of 76.",
"Reginald Denham Reginald Denham (10 January 1894 – 4 February 1983) was an English writer, theatre and film director, actor and film producer. Reginald H. F. Denham was born in London, England, in 1894. He spent a good part of his career directing Broadway theatre, with a career spanning from the melodrama \"Rope's End\" (1929) by Patrick Hamilton, to the courtroom drama \"Hostile Witness\" (1966). In 1930 he produced the First World War drama \"Suspense\" in the West End. He was married to Irish actress Moyna Macgill (1919–1924), English actress Lilian Oldland, and American actress and writer Mary Orr (from 1947 until his death). While they were married, Denham and Orr were writing partners. His daughter with Macgill, Isolde Denham, married actor Peter Ustinov when they were both 19. He died following a stroke in Englewood, New Jersey.",
"Terence Young (director) Stewart Terence Herbert Young (20 June 1915 – 7 September 1994) was an Irish film director and screenwriter who worked in the United Kingdom, Europe, and Hollywood. He is best known for directing three James Bond films, including the first two films in the series, \"Dr. No\" (1962) and \"From Russia with Love\" (1963), as well as \"Thunderball\" (1965). His other films include the Audrey Hepburn thrillers \"Wait Until Dark\" (1967) and \"Bloodline\" (1979), the historical drama \"Mayerling\" (1968), the infamous Korean War epic \"Inchon\" (1981), and the Charles Bronson films \"Cold Sweat\" (1970), \"Red Sun\" (1971), and \"The Valachi Papers\" (1972). Of Irish descent, Young was born in Shanghai, China, the son of a Police Commissioner of the Shanghai Municipal Police. His family moved back to England when he was young, and he was educated at Harrow School in London. He read oriental history at St Catharine's College at the University of Cambridge. Commissioned in the Irish Guards, Young was a tank commander during World War II where he participated in Operation Market Garden in Arnhem, Netherlands. Young began his career in the film industry as a screenwriter, earning a credit for Brian Desmond Hurst's \"On the Night of the Fire\" (1939), \"A Call for Arms\" (1940), \"Dangerous Moonlight\" (1941), and \"A Letter from Ulster\" (1942) and for other directors on \"Secret Mission\" (1942), \"On Approval\" (1944). In 1946, he returned to assist Hurst again with the script of \"Theirs Is the Glory\", which told the story of the fighting around Arnhem Bridge. Arnhem, coincidentally, was home to an adolescent Audrey Hepburn. During the later filming of Young's film \"Wait Until Dark\", Hepburn and Young joked that he had been shelling his favorite star without even knowing it. Young worked on the screenplays for Hurst's \"Hungry Hill\" (1947) and David McDonald's \"Bad Lord Byron\" (1949).",
"Valerie Delacorte Valéria Hidvéghy or Valerie Pascal Delacorte (14 June 1914 – 14 July 2011) was a Hungarian actress. Delacorte was born in Budapest and broke through the iron curtain to marry the film producer Gabriel Pascal. She is best known today for her 1970 memoir of him, \"The Disciple and His Devil: Gabriel Pascal and Bernard Shaw\". In a letter to the editor of the New York Times in 1995 she wrote that the character of Eliza in the guise of a Magyar princess in \"My Fair Lady\" was due to her first husband. After Pascal's death she married George T. Delacorte, Jr. in 1959 and together with him became a philanthropist as well as safeguarding Pascal's correspondence and legacy. She outlived this second husband as well and in 1991 three years after his death, made her first donation of $1 million and five Old Master paintings to the Norton Museum of Art. In total she donated 60 paintings to the museum. Delacorte died at her home in Palm Beach Gardens.",
"Paul Turner (director) Paul Turner (December 1945 – 1 November 2019) was a Welsh film director. His film \"Hedd Wyn\" (1992) became the first Welsh film to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Born in Devon, Turner learned Welsh while working at the BBC in the early 1980s and was a vocal supporter of Plaid Cymru. He was reportedly \"blacklisted\" from the BBC for his nationalist views (reported in an article in \"The Observer\"). S4C director called him \"a man with vision and a fire in his heart for all things Welsh and the Welsh language and his desire to portray that on film\". Paul had two daughters during his first marriage to Sheila Ford, He had 3 grandchildren. His second marriage was to Welsh actress Sue Roderick. He died in November 2019 at the age of 73. He won several international awards as well as having his film \"Hedd Wyn\" nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.",
"Jean Vigo Jean Vigo (; 26 April 1905 – 5 October 1934) was a French film director who helped establish poetic realism in film in the 1930s. His work influenced French New Wave cinema of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Vigo was born to Emily Clero and the militant anarchist Miguel Almereyda. Much of Vigo's early life was spent on the run with his parents. His father was imprisoned and murdered in Fresnes Prison on 13 August 1917. Some speculated that Almereyda was hushed up by order of Radical politicians Louis Malvy and Joseph Caillaux, men later punished for war-time treason. The young Vigo was subsequently sent to boarding school under an assumed name, Jean Sales, to conceal his identity. Vigo was married and had a daughter, Luce Vigo, a film critic, in 1931. He died in 1934 of complications from tuberculosis, which he had contracted eight years earlier. Vigo is noted for two films that affected the future development of both French and world cinema: \"Zero for Conduct\" (1933) and \"L'Atalante\" (1934). \"Zero for Conduct\" was approvingly described by critic David Thomson in \"The New Biographical Dictionary of Film\" as \"forty-four minutes of sustained, if roughly shot anarchic crescendo.\" \"L'Atalante\" was Vigo's only full-length feature. The simple story of a newly married couple splitting and reuniting effortlessly merges unpolished, naturalistic filmmaking with shimmering, dreamlike sequences and effects. Thomson described the result as \"not so much a masterpiece as a definition of cinema, and thus a film that stands resolutely apart from the great body of films.\" His career began with two other films: \"À propos de Nice\" (\"about Nice,\" 1930), a subversive silent film that considered social inequity in the resort town of Nice and was inspired by Soviet newsreels; and \"Jean Taris, Swimming Champion\" (1931), a study of swimmer Jean Taris. None of his four films were financial successes; at one point, with his and his wife's health suffering, Vigo was forced to sell his camera. \"Zero for Conduct\" was banned by the French government until after the war, and \"L'Atalante\" was mutilated by its distributor.",
"Michael McCarthy (film director) Michael McCarthy (27 February 1917 – 7 May 1959) was a British screenwriter and television and film director. He died aged 42, survived by a wife and three children. A \"Variety\" obituary said he was \"regarded as a director of considerable promise\".",
"Maung Wunna Maung Wunna (, 19 January 1947 – 11 January 2011) was a two-time Myanmar Motion Picture Academy Awards-winning Burmese director and writer. He came from a family heavily involved in the entertainment industry—his father Thadu was a director and his brother Thu Maung was a prominent singer and actor and Min Lu was a reputed satirist. Maung Wunna died of lung cancer in 2011. Wunna worked from an early age as a sound engineer and film editor for his novelist and filmmaker father, Thadu. In 1970 he earned a BA in philosophy from University of Yangon. His first film as a director, \"Katipa phanat see shwe htee hsaung\", was released in 1971, and he won the National Award for Best Direction. Alongside his work as screenwriter and director, Maung Wunna published articles on film, short stories and novels. After 42 years of regional release, his 1973 film \"Tender Are the Feet\" was premiered at the Forum section of the 64th Berlin Film Festival in February 2014.",
"John Griffith Wray John Griffith Wray (August 30, 1881 – July 15, 1929) was an American stage actor and director who later became a noted Hollywood silent film director. He worked on 19 films between 1913 and 1929 that included \"Anna Christie\" (1923) and \"Human Wreckage\" (1923), Dorothy Davenport's story about her husband Wallace Reid's drug addiction and death. Wray was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and died in Los Angeles, California. By 1912 Wray was a leading actor and stage director with the World's Fair Stock Company's yearlong Hawaiian tour. He married actress Virginia Brissac in Santa Ana, California, on June 29, 1915, and became the step-father of screenwriter Ardel Wray. The couple divorced in 1927. In October 1928, less than a year before his death, Wray married Bradley King, a Hollywood screenwriter.",
"Katherine Kath Katherine Kath (born Rose Marie Lily Faess; 11 August 1920 – 17 November 2012) was a French prima ballerina at the Theatre du Chatelet in Paris, who became an actress after suffering from an injury which destroyed her chances of continuing her career. Kath was born in Berck, Pas-de-Calais, France, where she also died, at age 92 in 2012, from undisclosed causes. Until shortly before then, she was living in London, near Fulham Road. She appeared in many international films and television programmes during her acting career. She met British filmmaker Jack Clayton in 1952, during the making of \"Moulin Rouge\", in which she portrayed the can-can dancer La Goulue and on which Clayton was the assistant director. Jack was gifted a watercolour of Katherine by Marcel Vertès - Wikipedia, who won two academy awards for his work on the film. It was signed \"A Jack Clayton tres amicalement\". The couple married in 1953, following Clayton's divorce from his first wife, Christine Norden, but the union was shortlived."
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[
"San Diego"
] |
What is the date of death of the composer of film Thaai Sollai Thattadhe?
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M. K. Athmanathan M. K. Athmanathan (1925 – 15 July 2013) is a music director and lyricist in Tamil cinema. He was honoured by the Tamil Nadu government with the Kalaimamani award in 1978. Born in the village Valliyoor in Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu, India. He started life as a goldsmith but his interest in The arts made him to join the drama troupe of T. K. Shanmugam at the age of 11. He entered the Tamil cinema in 1954 with the film Ratha Pasam as its music director. He also wrote 3 songs for the film. He scored music for 20 films and penned lyrics for more than 120 songs. Athmanathan died on 15 July 2013 at the age of 88.
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[
"Unnai Kann Theduthey Unnai Kann Theduthey () is a 2000 Indian Tamil-language drama film, directed by Sundar C, starring Sathyaraj, Khushbu, Livingston and Ravali. The film had musical score by Deva and was released in 2000. Music was composed by Deva. Lyrics were written by Pazhani Bharathi, Kalaikumar and Pa. Vijay.",
"Kalakkad S. Ramanarayana Iyer Kalakkad S. Ramanarayana Iyer () (10 October 1910 – 1992) was a Carnatic musician and composer born in Kalakkad, Tirunelveli District, Tamil Nadu, India. He was also awarded the Kalaimamani award by the Government of Tamil Nadu marking his dedication and service.",
"V. Kumar V. Kumar () (28 July 1934 – 7 January 1996) was a yesteryear Tamil cinema music director, born in Chennai, Tamilnadu on 28 July 1934 to Varadharajulu and Dhanabhakiyam couple, in July 1969 he married a Tamil cinema playback singer Swarna and had a son Suresh. V.Kumar is known as \"Mellisai MaamaNi\", was introduced to Tamil film music by K. Balachander. He has used P.Susheela S. P. Balasubrahmanyam for many of his songs. He has been the aasthana MD for K. Balachandar films. Before that, he scored music for his Stage Dramas. Their works include music for the following movies:",
"Thazhampoo Thazhampoo () is a 1965 Indian Tamil-language film directed by N. S. Ramadass. The film stars M. G. Ramachandran and K. R. Vijaya. It was released on 23 October 1965. When Kandaswamy, an accountant, goes to his employer to ask for money, he is framed for murder and imprisoned. His brother, Durai, convinced that Kandaswamy is innocent, strives to uncover the plot. The music was composed by K. V. Mahadevan. \"Thazhampoo\" was released on 23 October 1965, Diwali day. Writing in \"Sport and Pastime\", T. M. Ramachandran called it \"a mass entertainer with all conventional cliches\".",
"Thalirukal Thalirukal is a 1967 Indian Malayalam film, directed by M. S. Mani. The film stars Sathyan, Paul Vengola, C. R. Lakshmi and Chandni in lead roles. The film had musical score by A. T. Ummer. The music was composed by A. T. Ummer and the lyrics were written by Dr Pavithran.",
"Solaikuyil Solaikuyil is a 1989 Indian Tamil language action thriller film, directed by Rajan, starring Karthik, Ragini Karthik and Radha Ravi. The film had musical score by M. S. Murari and was released in 1989. The film was produced by Tamilmani. His notable other productions are Dharmapathini and Anbulla Rajinikanth. Maruthu enters the town of Mulimalai introducing himself as the grandson of the respected Mookaiya Devar, who left for Singapore years ago. While the others accept his claim, the village guardsman, Maayandi, is suspicious. Maruthu is drawn to the withdrawn Ponnuthaye. Her brother Kaali was convicted of raping and killing Valli, her friend. Kaali was sentenced to death but has escaped and is on the run. Ponnuthayee has no one other family expect Maayandi, who was Kaali's friend and sees her as a sister. Maruthu and Ponnuthaayee fall in love and a suspicious Maayandi makes his disapproval clear. Maruthu investigates and learns that Valli's intended accidentally killed her when he attempted to rape her and placed the blame on Kaali. Now exonerated, Kaali is still missing. The villagers are grateful for Maruthu's help and arrange for his wedding to Ponnuthayee. Maayandi, while also grateful for Maruthu's help, is still suspicious of him and makes it clear he does not believe Kaali will ever return. When it is confirmed that Kaali has been murdered the town is, once again, thrown into confusion and must resolve the mystery of his murder as well as Maruthu's true origins. The soundtrack was composed by M. S. Murari.",
"Eldhose Alias Eldhose Alias is a composer, singer and lyricist in Malayalam films. He is one of the founders of the Malayalam Music composers group, 4 Musics.",
"Naan Sollum Ragasiyam Naan Sollum Ragasiyam () is a 1959 Indian Tamil-language film, directed by P. Sridhar Rao and produced by V. C. Subburaman. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan and Anjali Devi. The film had musical score by G. Ramanathan. The music composed by G. Ramanathan. All lyrics were by A. Maruthakasi. Naan Sollum Ragasiyam was released on 7 March 1959, delayed from 27 February.",
"Madavoor Vasudevan Nair Madavoor Vasudevan Nair (7 April 1929 alattukavu, vallikeezhu, kollam, (Kerala) – 6 February 2018) was a veteran Kathakali artiste. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the Government of India. He taught the Kaplingadan style of Kathakali performance and was also one of the last practitioners of the south Kerala style (Kaplingadan) school of the classical dance-drama. He died on 6 February 2018, aged 88.",
"G. Ramanathan Gopalan Iyer Ramanathan was an Indian music composer for Tamil movies. He is also known as \"Isai Methai\" (Genius of Music) or \"Sangeetha Chakravarthy\" (Emperor of Music) and is considered to be one of the influential Tamil music composers to take Carnatic music to the masses. Notable for his association with M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar. G. Ramanathan also composed for films of Salem Modern Theatres and Coimbatore Central Studios. His career lasted until his death in 1963. During the 1950s G.Ramanathan's music dominated most of the box office hits of the then leading Tamil movie stars Shivaji Ganesan and M. G. Ramachandran. G. Ramanathan (GR) was born in Bikshandarkoil, Srirangam, Tamil Nadu, India. GR's biographer Vamanan indicates that his birth year could have been 1910. GR's father was Gopalsamy Iyer who worked as sub-inspector in the Indian Railways. He lost his parents while being young, and was taken care by his elder brother Sundara Bhagawathar. GR could have schooling only until standard 5. He married Jeyalakshmi in 1942 and had two daughters - Sai and Lakshmi. His grandchildren are Ranjan Balachandra and Bhavani Balachandra who are Lakshmi's son and daughter respectively and Prabhu and Uma Shekhar who are Sai's son and daughter. He joined the Baratha Gana Saba, a drama troupe and played harmonium at the age of 18. Then he joined the V. A. Chellappa Drama company, and sang playback and played harmonium. In 1932, he first played musical instrument for a Tamil film called \"Galavarishi\" which was produced in Bombay. In 1938 M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar produced \"Sathyaseelan\" in Bombay and GR became the music director for that film which followed by the Vipranarayana (old). The first film to be produced in Madras with GR as the music director was \"Bookailash\", followed by \"Parasuraman\" and \"Bhoologa Rambai\" (old). GR was a resident music director for the Modern Theatres since the beginning except a few which were done by K. V. Mahadevan."
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[
"21 June 2001"
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Do Alexander Haig and J. Edward Fox have the same nationality?
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Edward Fox Edward Fox may refer to:
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[
"Derek Fox Derek Fox may refer to:",
"Edward Haight Edward Haight may refer to:",
"Cecil Haig Cecil Haig (16 March 1862 – 3 March 1947) was a British fencer. He won a silver medal in the team épée event at the 1908 Summer Olympics. He was educated at Clifton College and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.",
"David Haig-Thomas David Haig-Thomas (1 December 1908 – 6 June 1944) was a British ornithologist, wildlife photographer, explorer and rower who competed for Great Britain in the 1932 Summer Olympics. He was an army commando during the Second World War, and was killed in action during the Normandy Landings. Haig-Thomas Island in the Canadian Arctic is named after him. Haig-Thomas was born in London and educated at Eton College and St John's College, Cambridge. In 1930, 1931 and 1932 he was bowman of the winning Cambridge boats in the Boat Race. He was also the bow of the eight that came fourth rowing for Great Britain at the 1932 Summer Olympics, and rowing correspondent of the \"Daily Mail\". Haig-Thomas married Nancy Catherine Bury, daughter of Major Lindsay Edward Bury. They had two sons. Initially a hunter with catapult and gun, he became an ornithologist and took up bird photography. His articles and photographs were published in \"Country Life\" and \"The Field\". In 1933 he went on an expedition to Abyssinia with his school contemporary Wilfred Thesiger to trace the route of the Awash River. In 1934, he was the ornithologist on the Oxford University Ellesmere Land Expedition which was organised by Edward Shackleton with the main purpose of exploring northern Ellesmere Island and to map its coastline. The expedition was led by Gordon Noel Humphreys who was head surveyor. Other members of the expedition were Shackleton, photographer and biologist A. W. Moore (sometimes listed as Morris), H. W. Stallworthy of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and geologist R. Bentham. With their Greenland Inuit guides, Inutuk and Nukapinguaq, they set up camp at Etah, Greenland in 1934. After wintering Greenland in 1934–1935, they sledged across Smith Sound and Ellesmere Island and in spring 1935. By the end of May 1935, the group had returned to Etah and reached England in late September the same year. In 1936, Haig-Thomas led an ornithological expedition to Iceland. From 1937 to 1938, he led a British Arctic Expedition in northwest Greenland and Ellesmere Island, accompanied by John Wright and Richard Hamilton.",
"Jimmy Haig (footballer) James Halliburton Haig (1876–1943) was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for Chesterfield Town and Derby County.",
"Oliver Fox Oliver Fox may refer to:",
"Edward Fox (actor) Edward Charles Morice Fox (born 13 April 1937) is an English actor. He played the part of the professional assassin, known only as the \"Jackal\", who is hired to assassinate the French president Charles de Gaulle in the summer of 1963, in the film \"The Day of the Jackal\" (1973). He is also known for his roles in \"Battle of Britain\" (1969), \"The Go-Between\" (1971), for which he won a BAFTA award, and \"The Bounty\" (1984). He also collaborated with director Richard Attenborough, appearing in his films \"Oh! What a Lovely War\" (1969), \"A Bridge Too Far\" (1977) and \"Gandhi\" (1982). He portrayed Edward VIII in the British television drama series \"Edward & Mrs. Simpson\" (1978) and appeared in the historical series \"Taboo\" (2017). In addition to film and television work, Fox has also received acclaim as a stage actor. Fox was born the first of three sons on 13 April 1937 in Chelsea, London, the son of Robin Fox, a theatrical agent, and Angela Muriel Darita Worthington, an actress and writer. He is the elder brother of actor James Fox and film producer Robert Fox, and an uncle of actor Laurence Fox. His paternal great-grandfather was industrialist and inventor Samson Fox, and his paternal grandmother was Hilda Hanbury, sister of stage performer Lily Hanbury. His maternal grandfather was dramatist Frederick Lonsdale, and his maternal grandmother was the daughter of football player and stockbroker Charles Morice. Fox was educated at Harrow School and completed his National Service in the Loyals, having failed to gain a commission in the Coldstream Guards. Fox made his theatrical debut in 1958, and his first film appearance was as an extra in \"The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner\" (1962). He also had a non-speaking part as a waiter in \"This Sporting Life\" (1963). Throughout the 1960s he worked mostly on stage, including a turn as \"Hamlet\". In the late 1960s and early 1970s he established himself with roles in major British films, including \"Oh! What a Lovely War\" (1969), \"Battle of Britain\" (1969) and \"The Go-Between\" (1971).",
"Don Haig Don Haig (22 July 1933 — 2 March 2002) was a Canadian filmmaker, editor, and producer. His work in film and television spanned nearly five decades. Over the course of his career, he won Academy, Genie, and Gemini awards, and the Governor General's Performing Arts Award. Don was known as the \"godfather of Canadian film\" for nurturing young talent and producing many award-winning films. He is recognized by some as \"the most important person on the Canadian film scene,\" helping create over 500 films. As a young man, Haig began his career in film distribution in Winnipeg. In the early years, he would travel to small prairie towns with films and a projector, and charge five cents or less to see a movie, as \"another pair of eyes doesn't cost much\". After the early years repairing film for MGM in Winnipeg, he later moved to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation where he remained until 1962. In 1963, with the support of filmmakers Allan King and Beryl Fox, he started his company Film Arts. Haig received film editing awards for the Beryl Fox documentaries including \"Summer in Mississippi\" and \"\". He also edited her \"Fields of Endless Day\". In 1970, Haig co-founded the Canadian Film Editors Guild in 1970. He was chairman of the Canadian Film and Television Association in 1972. Among the films he helped produce was \"\", which was written and directed by Brigitte Berman in 1985. Oprah Winfrey presented Berman and Haig with an Oscar at the 59th Academy Awards. After his retirement and sale of Film Arts to Film House, Haig joined the National Film Board of Canada in 1992 and became head of English production. He was noted for aiding young talent with funding, guidance, and editing their films. He retired in 1998 after completing many NFB productions. He died in 2002 at his home in Toronto. The Don Haig Foundation was established to see his legacy of supporting young filmmakers continue. In 2004, the Don Haig Foundation began recognizing aspiring documentary filmmakers with an annual award. On February 6, 2006, the award committee began a partnership with the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival to ensure a home for the Don Haig Award. Haig was gay. His life partner was Bill Schultz.",
"Henry Fox Henry Fox may refer to:",
"Wallace Fox Wallace Fox (March 9, 1895 – June 30, 1958) was an American film director. He directed more than 80 films between 1927 and 1953. He was born in Purcell, Oklahoma, and died in Hollywood, California."
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[
"yes"
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Who died later, Maurice Salomez or Albrecht Fröhlich?
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Albrecht Fröhlich Albrecht Fröhlich FRS (22 May 1916 – 8 November 2001) was a German-born British mathematician, famous for his major results and conjectures on Galois module theory in the Galois structure of rings of integers. He was born in Munich to a Jewish family. He fled from the Nazis to France, and then to Palestine. He went to Bristol University in 1945, gaining a Ph.D in 1951 with a dissertation entitled "On Some Topics in the Theory of Representation of Groups and Individual Class Field Theory " under the supervision of Hans Heilbronn. He was a lecturer at the University of Leicester and then at the Keele University, then in 1962 moved as reader to King's College London where he worked until his retirement in 1981 when he moved to Robinson College, Cambridge. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1976. He was awarded the Berwick Prize of the London Mathematical Society in 1976 and its De Morgan Medal in 1992. The Society's Fröhlich Prize is named in his honour. He is the brother of Herbert Fröhlich.
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[
"Philipp Fröhlich Philipp Fröhlich (born 1975) is a German painter who lives and works in Brussels. His figurative paintings are influenced by his studies of scenography in the class of Professor at Kunstakademie Düsseldorf and he frequently uses models for the composition of his works. Fröhlich's work is held in the following public collections:",
"Josef Aloys Frölich Josef Aloys Frölich or Alois von Frölich (10 March 1766, Marktoberdorf – 11 March 1841) was a German doctor, botanist and entomologist. He is not to be confused with Franz Anton Gottfried Frölich (1805–1878), his son, also an entomologist but specialising in Lepidoptera. In the field of botany he described many species within the genus \"Hieracium\". The genus \"Froelichia\" (family Amaranthaceae) is named in his honor.",
"Michael von Fröhlich Michael, Freiherr von Fröhlich (9 January 1740 – 1814) was a German general officer serving in army of the Austrian Empire, notably during the Wars of the French Revolution. Fröhlich was born in Marburg in Hesse, Germany, and by 1778 was a Major commanding infantry in the Warasdin district of Croatia. During the War of the Bavarian Succession he headed a surprise attack on the fort at Dittersbach and captured 110 prisoners. In 1783 he became Oberstleutnant (lieutenant colonel) and in 1788 Oberst (colonel). On 27 May 1789 during the war against Turkey he defended Dobroselo with Oberst Weiler for over 10 hours with only 1,500 men against 10,000 enemies. Promoted General-major in 1793, he served in Franz von Werneck's division under Prince Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld in the Austrian Netherlands in 1794. In 1795 he fought on the Rhine at Mannheim. In 1796 Fröhlich was promoted to Feldmarschall-Leutnant and commanded a mixed column of Austrian, Émigré and Kreis-Armee soldiers on the left wing of the Army of the Upper Rhine under Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser. From 18 June 1796 he served under Maximilian Anton Karl, Count Baillet de Latour. Following Moreau’s crossing of the Rhine he was cut off 24 June, but was able to reunite with the forces of the Archduke Charles at Nördlingen on 10 August. He was then made commander of the 11,000 man corps connected to Latour on the Lech in the Vorarlberg. He served at the combat of Kammlach 13th, then the following month faced Pierre Marie Barthélemy Ferino on the upper Iller and Tyrol, pursuing him during Moreau's retreat to the Rhine. Fröhlich joined with Charles and Latour to defeat Moreau at the Battle of Emmendingen on 19 October 1796 and Battle of Schliengen five days later. In 1799 he was made Colonel Proprietor (Inhaber) of Infantry Regiment Nr. 28 and commanded a 14,000 man division in Italy.",
"Alfred Fröhlich Alfred Fröhlich (August 15, 1871 – March 22, 1953) was an Austrian-American pharmacologist and neurologist born in Vienna. Fröhlich was born in Vienna, into a Jewish family. In 1895 he graduated from the University of Vienna, afterwards remaining at Vienna as an assistant to Carl Nothnagel (1841–1905). In 1905 he became a member of the department of pharmacology at the university, and from 1919 until 1939 he was a full professor of pharmacology and toxicology. Following the Nazi takeover of Austria, Fröhlich emigrated to the United States, where he worked at the May Institute of Medical Research of the Jewish Hospital of Cincinnati. Here he continued his experimental research of the central nervous system. He is remembered for his studies on the effects of the pituitary on the autonomic nervous system. With Otto Loewi (1873–1961), he performed pharmacological research on cocaine. He was a good friend of Harvey Cushing, whom he met in 1901 while working with Charles Scott Sherrington in Liverpool. In addition to his own laboratory, he also worked in marine laboratories at Naples, Helgoland and in Woods Hole, Massachusetts during his career. Fröhlich died in 1953 in Cincinnati. In 1901 he provided a comprehensive description of \"dystrophia adiposogenitalis\", of which he published a paper titled \"Ein Fall von Tumor der Hypophysis cerebri ohne Akromegalie\". This disorder is characterized by feminine obesity along with retarded sexual maturity, and is caused by tumors of the pituitary. In honor of his discovery, this condition was to become known as \"Fröhlich's syndrome\". It is sometimes referred to as Babinski-Fröhlich syndrome, named in conjunction with Joseph Babinski, who gave an independent description of the disease a year earlier in 1900.",
"Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich (20 February 1803 – 16 October 1836) was a Swiss early Romantic composer. Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich was born in Brugg, Aargau, Switzerland, the 6th child of a Swiss family living in Brugg. His older brother Abraham Emanuel Fröhlich was a priest, writer and politician. After completing the gymnasium in Zürich, he started studying jurisprudence in Basel and later in Berlin. In 1824 he returned to Aarau because of illness. There he took lessons in musical composition under Michael Traugott Pfeiffer. In 1826–1828 he received a grant from the cantonal government of Aargau to go to Berlin and take musical lessons from Carl Friedrich Zelter and Bernhard Klein. In Berlin he met Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. In 1830 he returned to Switzerland. Although Fröhlich had minor success in Berlin, he never received any recognition or support for his art in his home town of Aarau. He struggled financially and eventually marital trouble led to depression. On 16 October 1836 he committed suicide by jumping into the river Aare. His work consists of over 700 compositions, of which more than 300 were for piano and more than 300 for choir.",
"Wilhelm Salomon Freund Wilhelm Salomon Freund (1831–1915) was a Jewish German lawyer and politician. Freund was born in Schmiegel (Śmigiel) in the Province of Posen. He received his law degree from the University of Breslau (Wrocław). He served as a member of the Prussian House of Deputies from 1876–79 and a member of the Reichstag from 1879–81. He died in Breslau.",
"Rainer Fröhlich Rainer Fröhlich (born 30 July 1957) is a Swiss sailor. He competed in the Flying Dutchman event at the 1984 Summer Olympics.",
"Franjo Fröhlich Franjo Fröhlich was a Yugoslav fencer. He competed in the individual sabre event at the 1928 Summer Olympics.",
"Wilhelm Fröhner Wilhelm Fröhner or Guillaume Frœhner (17 August 1834 – 22 May 1925) was a curator at the Musée du Louvre, an archaeological researcher and collector of antiquities in Paris. As a historian, he publicly rejected Gustave Flaubert's depiction of infanticide in Punic culture, described in \"Salammbô\". Among his private purchases was the Nazareth Inscription, an imperial Roman inscription in Greek that was sent to him from Nazareth. Unfortunately, part of his working library was lost in the fire at the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in 2004.",
"Jürg Fröhlich Jürg Martin Fröhlich (born 4 July 1946 in Schaffhausen) is a Swiss mathematician and theoretical physicist. He is best known for introducing rigorous techniques for the analysis of statistical mechanics models, in particular continuous symmetry breaking (infrared bounds), and for pioneering the study of topological phases of matter using low-energy effective field theories. In 1965 Fröhlich began to study mathematics and physics at Eidgenössischen Technischen Hochschule Zürich. In 1969, under Klaus Hepp and Robert Schrader, he attained the Diplom (“Dressing Transformations in Quantum Field Theory”), and in 1972 he earned a PhD from the same institution under Klaus Hepp. After postdoctoral visits to the University of Geneva and Harvard University (with Arthur Jaffe), he took an assistant professorship in 1974 in the mathematics department of Princeton University. From 1978 until 1982 he was a professor at Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques in Bures-sur-Yvette in Paris, and since 1982 he has been a professor for theoretical physics at ETH, where he founded the Center for Theoretical Studies. Over the course of his career, Fröhlich has worked on quantum field theory (including axiomatic quantum field theory, conformal field theory, and topological quantum field theory), on the precise mathematical treatment of models of statistical mechanics, on theories of phase transition, on the fractional quantum Hall effect, and on non-commutative geometry. In 1991 he received with Thomas Spencer the Dannie Heineman prize, in 1997 he received the Marcel Benoist Prize, in 2001 he won the Max Planck Medal of the Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft, and in 2009 he was awarded the Henri Poincaré Prize. He is a member of the Academia Europaea and the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. In 1978, Fröhlich gave an invited address to the International Congress of Mathematicians in Helsinki (“On the mathematics of phase transitions”) and in 1994 at the plenary talk of the ICM in Zurich (“The FQHE, Chern–Simons Theory and Integral Lattices”). He also co-authored a book on quantum triviality. In 2020, he was elected international member of the National Academy of Sciences."
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[
"Albrecht Fröhlich"
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When is the presenter of Saint-Tropez Games 's birthday?
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Saint-Tropez Games Saint-Tropez Games was a popular TV show broadcast in Italy, Romania, Russia and Ukraine. It was presented by Dan Negru.
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[
"Jacques Antoine Jacques Antoine (14 March 1924 – 14 September 2012) was a French creator and producer of game shows. His most famous creations include \"Treasure Hunt\", \"Interceptor\", \"Fort Boyard\", and \"The Crystal Maze\". Jacques Antoine was born 14 March 1924 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a suburb to the west of Paris. His father was writer and director André-Paul Antoine, and his grandfather was theatre director André Antoine. At the age of 24, Jacques Antoine made his first steps in radio with Pierre Bellemare. From the 1950s to 1990s, he created and produced many programs, including more than 150 television and radio games among the most famous in French-speaking countries, such as \"La Tête et les Jambes\", \"Le Schmilblick\", \"Les Jeux de 20 heures\", \"La Chasse aux trésors\", \"L'Académie des neuf\", \"Tournez manège\", and \"Fort Boyard\". Antoine died on 14 September 2012 of cardiac arrest. The French host of \"Fort Boyard\" Olivier Minne announced on Twitter \"Jacques Antoine has left us. The father of Fort Boyard was the greatest TV game creator. I'm very sad. Thinking of him.\" Rémy Pflimlin, president of France Télévisions spoke of him as \"one of the iconic group who contributed to the creation and production of the first televised games\". TV host Pierre Bellemare described Jacques as \"the most innovative man we have had in this profession since the war\".",
"Sophie Le Saint Sophie Le Saint (born 22 July 1968) is a French journalist and television presenter. From November 1998 to July 2019, she was a presenter on channel France 2 hosting \"Télématin\" and as a replacing presenter at the \"Journal de 13 heures\", and in exceptional occasions at the \"Journal de 20 heures\". Sophie Le Saint was born in Parthenay in the department of Deux-Sèvres. She graduated at the Institute of Journalism of Bordeaux and began her career at France Bleu Provence as a volunteer where she presents the night programs, and followed with an internship at M6 in 1989. She then worked at the redaction department of the daily newspaper \"Le Figaro\" from 1991 to 1994, and on TF1 as a stringer. In November 1998, she joined France 2 to present the \"Télématin\". Since February 2008, she is one of the replacing presenters of the \"Journal de 13 heures\" on the same channel. During summer 2008, she presented alternatively with Laurence Piquet the midday edition. After the nomination of Françoise Laborde at the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel in January 2009, she became the permanent replacement of Élise Lucet at the \"13 heures\". In July 2010, she replaced Laurent Delahousse at the \"13 heures\" on weekend. In August 2010 and April 2011, she replaced David Pujadas at the \"Journal de 20 heures\" during the week. From March 2015 to August 2016, she was a replacing presenter for the \"13 heures\" on France 2. Between 2015 and 2019, she was not part of the replacing presenters of the channel anymore and focused entirely on presenting \"Télématin\". However, she presented again the \"13 heures\" on weekend in April 2019 replacing Leïla Kaddour, as well as the \"20 heures\" on weekend in July 2019 replacing Laurent Delahousse. She announced on 4 July 2019 leaving \"Télématin\" on her Instagram account. She joined the channel France Info in August 2019 to present the afternoon news \"13h-17h\".",
"Sandrine Quétier Sandrine Quétier (born 30 December 1970) is a French television presenter. Sandrine Quétier was born in Paris and spent her childhood at the Vallée de Chevreuse. She graduated at age 17 with her high school final exam before starting to study. After working at the communication department of an optical company, she began her career in 1994 presenting the draw of the game \"Keno\" on France 3. She then started presenting on M6 with \"Politiquement rock\" from 1997 to 2000, and in the meantime, she presented flashes on M6 Music as well as \"Le live du vendredi\" in 1997. From 2000 to 2001, she presented various programs such as \"Culture pub\", \"Grand écran\" and \"Ciné 6\". In 2002, in addition to \"Grand écran\", she presented the programs \"Plus vite que la musique\" and \"Sex in the pub\". In 2003 on France 2, she co-hosted \"Qu'est-ce qui se passe quand ?\" from September to November. She then co-hosted \"Le grand examen du savoir vivre\" in prime time with Thierry Beccaro in December 2003, \"Les vainqueurs de l'année\" with Jean-Luc Delarue and \"Code de la route, le grand examen\" with Patrice Laffont on 20 June 2004. From 2004 to 2012, she co-hosted \"Les 100 plus grands...\" with Christophe Dechavanne at the first part of the evening on TF1. Since November 2006, she co-hosts \"50 minutes inside\" every Saturday evening with Nikos Aliagas on the same channel. Since September 2006, she is the French presenter of E!, where she presents television and film ceremonies (Oscars, Golden Globes, Deauville Film Festival, Cannes Film Festival), as well as weekly evening specials. From November 2008 to December 2009, she co-hosted \"10 h le mag\" with Julien Arnaud on TF1. In November 2009, she presented at the first part of the evening \"Le Plus Grand Quiz de France\" on the same channel. In December 2009, she presented two evening programs, \"120 Minutes Inside\" with Nikos Aliagas and \"Chanson de l'année\".",
"Muriel Tramis Muriel Tramis (born in 1958) is a French video game designer from Martinique. She is known as the first Black woman video game designer. She has written and directed the adventure games \"Méwilo\", \"Freedom\", \"Geisha\", \"Fascination\", \"Lost in Time\" and \"Urban Runner\" at Coktel Vision. She also co-created the \"Gobliiins\" series with Pierre Gilhodes. Tramis was involved in the creation of the range for schoolchildren and college students, and since 2003 has managed Avantilles, a specialist in real-time 3D applications for the web. Muriel Tramis was born in 1958 in Fort-de-France, Martinique where she attended school at the convent of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Cluny and then at the Seminary College. She moved to Paris to pursue a generalist and polyvalent engineering training at ISEP (Institut supérieur d'électronique de Paris). Before becoming a French video game creator, she was computer engineer. Tramis soon began five years at Aérospatiale, where she was responsible for optimizing maintenance procedures for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in addition to handling remotely piloted aircraft used in missile fire tests and anti-ship missiles. After leaving Aérospatiale, she began to explore marketing and communication, alongside interactive programs. In 1986, Tramis joined Coktel Vision, a French video game design and publishing company, leaving in 2003. She describes her time with this company as very satisfying both intellectually and creatively. She helped Coktel Vision develop some of their most well-known and best-selling games. In 1991 \"Gobliiins\" sold almost 1.5 million copies in collaboration with Coktel vision. Another one of her most popular games was \"Lost in Time\", an adventure game developed and published by Coktel Vision in 1993. It was promoted as being \"The first Interactive Adventure Film using Full Motion Video Technology\" and contained four graphical elements, namely full motion video, hand painted and digitized backgrounds and 3D decor. The plot was based upon a woman exploring a shipwreck which has mysteriously been transported back in time to 1840. The ship was still intact so she had no choice but to explore it. This leads to revelations about her past.",
"Robert Fontaine Robert Fontaine (born 18 November 1980) is a French chess player and journalist. He was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 2002. He played under Monaco flag from 2016 to 2018 and now plays for Switzerland. Born in 1980, Fontaine earned his international master title in 1997 and his grandmaster title in 2002. He was a professional chess player from 2002 to 2005, when he became a professional chess coach and director of the Cannes Chess Club. In 2004 Fontaine played on the French national team at the 36th Chess Olympiad. He also worked as a presenter for \"Europe Échecs\". He joined Agon Limited as chief of staff in August 2012, but resigned after the World Chess Championship 2013 due to disagreements with Andrew Paulson. He transferred his national federation to Monaco in 2016 and to Switzerland in 2018. On 25 February 2009, Fontaine married Kateryna Lagno, also a chess player, and together they had one son. The couple has separated.",
"Bertrand Renard Bertrand Renard (born April 28, 1955) is a French television presenter and author. He is a former contestant and the presenter of the game show \"Des chiffres et des lettres\". Bertrand Renard was born in Paris. He studied classics (French / Latin / Greek) at the Sorbonne, He passed one Agrégation de Lettres Classiques but failed overall. Interested in television, he did not retake the exam. He was a good student, but acknowledged his lack of interest. He is a passionate student of history and was described as having hyperthymesia, memorizing without any effort. He stated that he was \"absolutely not interested in mathematics and science\". In September 1974, Renard participated at age 19 on the game show \"Des chiffres et des lettres\". He was noticed for his facility with mental calculation and by his shy attitude, hiding behind long hair and thin mustache, which he kept, as well as his anxious attitude, continuously moving on his chair. After twelve victories in a row, he earned 6,000 francs. In March 1975, the producer, Armand Jammot, hired him to join the team as a presenter, replacing Fabien Buhler. He was known as \"Monsieur Calcul\". Renard explained his hiring by the fact that \"the game was at that time presented by Patrice Laffont who was 35. 'Monsieur Dictionnaire' was Max Favalelli, who was much older, 70. And I was the youngest, so it created a sort of balance\". They put him in charge of verifying game results with numbers and calculation titled \"Le Compte est bon\". Renard took charge in 1975 with Favalelli of the part with letters and words titled \"Le Mot le plus long\", and then with Arielle Boulin-Prat in 1986, replacing Favalelli. The other presenters were Patrice Laffont first, and since 1992, Laurent Romejko. For more than 39 years he daily officiated without interruption on the show. He has never taken a vacation, afraid that he would be replaced. He is the oldest presenter, appearing on the oldest program, on French television. Michel Drucker started earlier, but appeared less often because he appeared daily. Renard wrote a collection of stories and two novels. One obtained the a prize from the Société des gens de lettres.",
"Jean-Pierre Le Roux (chess player) Jean-Pierre Le Roux (born 18 May 1982) is a French chess player. He was awarded a grandmaster title in 2010, an International master in 2004 and a FIDE master in 2003 from FIDE. He is ranked 16th in France. He won the 43rd Guernsey International Chess Festival in 2017 and the French rapid chess championship in 2018.",
"Stéphane Messi Stéphane Messi (born 27 November 1972) is a French para table tennis player who competes in international level events. He is a Paralympic champion, a five-time World medalist and a European champion. He has won medals in team events alongside Michel Schaller, François Sérignat and Alain Pichon.",
"Étienne Thobois Étienne Thobois (born 20 September 1967) is a French badminton player. He competed in the men's singles tournament at the 1996 Summer Olympics. He serves as director general of the Paris Organising Committee for the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.",
"Frédéric Joly Frédéric Joly is a French television host and producer. He debuted his TV career in 1994, co-presenting the \"Disney Club\". Fred was then his nickname, and he hosted alongside Julie, then Delphine. Then he moved to France 2 for a broadcast on the series, and presented his first prime-time during a special evening \"Urgences\". During the summer, he hosted \"Fous d'humour\". Since 1998, he was back on TF1. He presents the daily show \"Exclusif\" with Emmanuelle Gaume and Flavie Flament. In December 2002, he joined TF6 to host the game \"Menteur\", then France 2 for \"Trivial Pursuit\". Finally in 2006, he moved to TPS Star to present \"Autour du blockbuster\". He also presented \"Amnésia, les dossiers de la vie\" on NRJ 12. He has his own production company. In September 2003, he has been married with Alexandra. They have a son named Valentin, born on 9 August 2004."
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[
"23 February 1971"
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Where was the place of death of the director of film Wolf Fangs?
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Wolf Fangs Wolf Fangs is a 1927 American action film directed by Lewis Seiler and written by Seton I. Miller and Elizabeth Pickett Chevalier. The film stars Thunder the Dog supported by Caryl Lincoln, Charles Morton, Frank Rice and James Gordon. Released in November 1927, the feature was produced and distributed by Fox Film Corporation.
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[
"Wolf Gremm Wolf Gremm (26 February 1942 – 14 July 2015) was a German film director and screenwriter. Gremm was born in Freiburg im Breisgau in 1942. In the 1960s, he studied German literature, psychology, sociology and theater. After graduation, he studied film direction at the Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin and directed his first feature film \"Ich dachte, ich wär tot\" in 1973. During the 1970s and early 1980s, he produced several feature films. His greatest success was the 1980 film \"Fabian\" based on a novel by German author Erich Kästner. This film was chosen as West Germany's official submission to the 53rd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film, but was not nominated. He was a close friend of the German film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who also starred in Gremm's 1982 film \"Kamikaze 1989\". Gremm was married to the film producer Regina Ziegler, who began her career as the producer of Gremm's first feature film \"Ich dachte, ich wär tot\". He died at the age of 73 in Berlin on 14 July 2015 from cancer.",
"Blood on Wolf Mountain Blood on Wolf Mountain, also known as The Wolf Hill, Bloodbath in Langshan, and Bloodshed on Wolf Mountain, is a Chinese film directed by acclaimed Shanghainese film director Fei Mu. Made just prior to the commencement of full-scale war with Imperial Japan, the film itself is often considered an allegory of conflict between China and Japan that had been going on intermittently since the Invasion of Manchuria in 1931. The film was produced by the Lianhua Film Company and was released in November of 1936. The film tells the story of a village that is beset by a pack of wolves. Though the symbolism was clear, the Japanese themselves refused to acknowledge that they could be represented by blood-thirsty wolves. \"Blood on Wolf Mountain\" starred actresses Li Lili, and Lan Ping (who later in life would adopt the name Jiang Qing and gain notoriety as the wife of Mao Zedong and a member of the Gang of Four).",
"Wallace Fox Wallace Fox (March 9, 1895 – June 30, 1958) was an American film director. He directed more than 80 films between 1927 and 1953. He was born in Purcell, Oklahoma, and died in Hollywood, California.",
"Wolf Creek (film) Wolf Creek is a 2005 Australian horror film written, co-produced and directed by Greg McLean and starring John Jarratt, Nathan Phillips, Cassandra Magrath and Kestie Morassi. Its plot concerns three backpackers who find themselves taken captive and subsequently hunted by Mick Taylor, a sadistic, psychopathic, xenophobic serial killer, in the Australian outback. The film was ambiguously marketed as being \"based on true events\", while its plot bore elements reminiscent of the real-life murders of backpackers by Ivan Milat in the 1990s and Bradley Murdoch in 2001, both of which McLean used as inspiration for the screenplay. Produced on a $1.1 million budget, filming of \"Wolf Creek\" took place in South Australia; the film was shot almost exclusively on high-definition video. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2005. It was given a theatrical release in Ireland and the United Kingdom in September 2005, followed by a general Australian release in November, apart from the Northern Territory, out of respect for the pending trial surrounding the murder of Peter Falconio. In the United States and Canada, it was released on Christmas Day 2005, distributed by Dimension Films. \"Wolf Creek\" received mixed reviews from film critics, with several, such as Roger Ebert and Manohla Dargis, criticising it for its realistic and unrelenting depictions of violence. Other publications, such as \"Variety\" and \"Time Out\", praised the film's grindhouse aesthetics, with the latter calling its straightforward depiction of crime and violence \"taboo-breaking\". The film was nominated for seven Australian Film Institute awards, including Best Director (for McLean). In 2010, it was included in \"Slant Magazine\"s list of the 100 best films of the decade. In Broome, Western Australia, 1999, two British tourists, Liz Hunter and Kristy Earl, are backpacking across the country with Ben Mitchell, an Australian friend. Ben buys a dilapidated car for their journey from Broome to Cairns, Queensland via the Great Northern Highway. The trio makes a stop at Wolf Creek National Park. Hours later, they discover that their watches have stopped and the car will not start. After dark, a man named Mick Taylor comes across them and offers to tow them to his camp to repair the car.",
"Markus Wolf Markus Johannes Wolf (19 January 1923 – 9 November 2006), also known as Mischa, was head of the Main Directorate for Reconnaissance (), the foreign intelligence division of East Germany's Ministry for State Security (, abbreviated MfS, commonly known as the ). He was the Stasi's number two for 34 years, which spanned most of the Cold War. He is often regarded as one of the most well-known spymasters during the Cold War. In the West he was known as \"the man without a face\" due to his elusiveness. Wolf was born 19 January 1923, in Hechingen, Province of Hohenzollern (now Baden-Württemberg), to a Jewish father and a non-Jewish German mother. His father was the writer, communist activist and physician Friedrich Wolf (1888–1953) and his mother was the nursery teacher Else Wolf ( Dreibholz; 1898–1973). He had one brother, the film director Konrad Wolf (1925–1982). His father was a member of the Communist Party of Germany, and after the anti-socialist and anti-Semitic Nazi Party gained power in 1933, Wolf emigrated to Moscow with his father, via Switzerland and France, because of their communist convictions and because Wolf's father was Jewish. During his exile, Wolf first attended the German Karl Liebknecht School and later a Russian school. In 1936, at the age of 13, he obtained Soviet identity documents. After finishing school, Wolf entered the Moscow Institute of Airplane Engineering (Moscow Aviation Institute) in 1940, which was evacuated to Alma Ata after Nazi Germany's attack on the Soviet Union. There he was told to join the Comintern in 1942, where he among others was prepared for undercover work behind enemy lines. He also worked as a newsreader for German People's Radio after the dissolution of the Comintern, from 1943 until 1945. After the war he was sent to Berlin with the Ulbricht Group, led by Walter Ulbricht, to work as a journalist for a radio station in the Soviet Zone of occupation. He was among those journalists who observed the entire Nuremberg trials against the principal Nazi leaders. Between 1949 and 1951 Wolf worked at the East German embassy in the Soviet Union. That same year he joined the Ministry for State Security (Stasi).",
"Wolf (1994 film) Wolf is a 1994 American romantic horror film directed by Mike Nichols and starring Jack Nicholson, Michelle Pfeiffer, James Spader, Kate Nelligan, Richard Jenkins, Christopher Plummer, Eileen Atkins, David Hyde Pierce, and Om Puri. It was written by Jim Harrison and Wesley Strick, and an uncredited Elaine May. The music was composed by Ennio Morricone and the cinematography was done by Giuseppe Rotunno. Will Randall is bitten by a black wolf he accidentally struck while driving home in Vermont. Afterwards, he gets demoted from editor-in-chief of a publishing house when it gets taken over by tycoon Raymond Alden, who replaces him with Will's protégé Stewart Swinton. Will discovers that Stewart had begged Raymond for the job behind Will's back and suspects that Stewart is having an affair with his wife Charlotte, after he smells Stewart's scent on her clothes. Will bites Stewart on the hand while entering his apartment and rushes to the room to find Charlotte half-naked. His worst fears are confirmed, and he leaves without saying a word. Will becomes more aggressive as he starts taking on the characteristics of a wolf. With the help of Raymond's headstrong daughter Laura, Will sets out for his new life. His first werewolf transformation takes place at Laura's estate, where he wakes up at night and hunts down a deer. In the morning, Will finds himself on the bank of a stream, with blood all over his face and hands. He visits Dr. Vijav Alezais, who gives him an amulet to protect him from turning completely into a wolf. However, he cannot persuade Will to infect him. That night, Will transforms into a werewolf again: he breaks into the zoo and steals handcuffs from a policeman. Muggers want his wallet, but Will attacks and bites the fingers off one of them. He wakes up in his hotel, with no memory of what happened. Will organizes a mutiny of writers, who threaten to leave the publishing house unless he is retained as editor-in-chief. Raymond agrees, and Will's first act is to fire Stewart, urinating on his shoes in a bathroom and claiming he is \"marking his territory\". While washing his hands, Will finds the fingers in his handkerchief and realizes he has wounded someone. He cuffs himself to a radiator in his hotel room, but Laura arrives and downplays his belief that he is werewolf.",
"William Wolf (critic) William Wolf (1925 – March 28, 2020) was an American film and theater critic and the author. Wolf was a film critic for \"Cue\" and \"New York\" magazines in the 1960s–1980s. Wolf served two years as Chairman of the New York Film Critics Circle and was a member of the National Society of Film Critics, the New York Film Critics Online, the Online Film Critics Society, PEN, the American Theatre Critics Association, the International Association of Theatre Critics, and the American Association of University Professors. He served for four years as President of the Drama Desk, an organization of critics and writers on the theater, and previously served for two years on its nominating committee for the Drama Desk Awards and was on the Drama Desk Executive Board. At New York University, he was an Adjunct Professor and taught Film as Literature in the English Department and Cinema and Literature in the French Department. Professor Wolf was particularly known for his Movie Preview course, now presented independently at Lincoln Center in the Elinor Bunin Munroe Center. During the course of his career, Wolf interviewed hundreds of film and theater notables and has covered the world's major film festivals. Among those he interviewed were Ingmar Bergman and Charlie Chaplin. Audio tapes of his interviews with directors, actors, producers, and others in the world of cinema and the stage constitute the William Wolf Film and Theater Interview Collection (1972–1998), part of the Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, that he donated to the New York Public Library of the Performing Arts. Wolf was the author of \"Landmark Films: The Cinema and Our Century\", which he wrote in collaboration with his wife, Lillian Kramer Wolf, and of \"The Marx Brothers\". He has contributed chapters on \"Easy Rider\" and \"Duck Soup\" to \"The A List: 100 Essential Films\" a collection of reviews by members of the National Society of Film Critics, and \"The Eroticism of Words\" and \"Kinsey\" chapters in the National Society's sequel, \"The X List.\" He died from complications brought on by COVID-19 on March 28, 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic in New York (state).",
"Joseph Franz (director) Joseph J. Franz (October 12, 1883 – September 9, 1970) was an actor and film director during the silent film era in the United States. Franz was born in Utica, New York. He died in Los Angeles in 1970. He was sometimes credited as Joseph J. Franz. He features in a Frontier advertisement with two of the studio's other stars. Franz acted on stage in stock theater for three years before he began acting in films.",
"House of the Wolf Man House of the Wolf Man is an American independent monster horror film produced in 2009 by My Way Pictures. The film was inspired by the Universal Monsters movies, and was shot in the same style. The film's star Ron Chaney is the great-grandson of Lon Chaney and the grandson of Lon Chaney, Jr., both of whom starred in numerous Universal Monsters films. Dr. Bela Reinhardt (Ron Chaney) is a mad doctor who has invited five people to his castle to determine which of them shall inherit his estate. He has arranged for a competition of sorts. The winner will be chosen by process of...elimination. The visitors quickly realize they have made a terrible mistake in accepting Reinhardt's invitation, but are trapped like rats in a cage under the watchful eye of Reinhardt's ghoulish manservant, Barlow. They soon discover the castle is full of terrifying monsters such as the Wolf Man, Frankenstein's monster, and Dracula. \"House of the Wolf Man\" is an homage to classic horror films, shot in black and white and 1:33 aspect ratio (full frame).",
"Giles Walker Giles Walker (January 17, 1946 - March 23, 2020) was a Scottish-born Canadian film director. Giles Walker, born in 1946 in Dundee, Scotland, received a B.A. from the University of New Brunswick and an M.A. from Stanford University Film School in 1972. He joined the Canadian National Film Board soon after, directing documentaries, then switching to dramas in 1977. \"Bravery in the Field\" was nominated for a live-action short Oscar in 1979. \"The Masculine Mystique\" (directed with John N. Smith), the first of a trio of NFB movies dealing with issues of gender relations, showed Walker's experimental side, working with non-professional actors and the technique of improvisation. The two other films in the series, however, moved closer to an easy, palatable Hollywood style – successfully in \"90 Days\" but less so in \"The Last Straw\". Perhaps Walker's most successful fictional work is \"Princes in Exile\", a film about a summer camp for children with cancer, notable for delicate treatment of the subject and a moving lack of sentimentality. Walker died in March 2020."
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[
"Hollywood"
] |
What is the place of birth of the composer of song Left Alone (Song)?
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Left Outside Alone "Left Outside Alone" is a song by American recording artist Anastacia from her third studio album, "Anastacia". Written primarily by Anastacia as well as Dallas Austin, and Glen Ballard detailing the singer's strained relationship with her estranged father. The song was released as the album's lead single on March 15, 2004, to both critical and commercial success. The song peaked at number one in Australia, Austria, Italy, Spain, and Switzerland; number two in Denmark, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Norway; and number three in the United Kingdom and Hungary, while overall it became the sixth-biggest-selling European single of 2004. In the United States, "Left Outside Alone" was another success on the "Billboard" dance charts, where it reached the top position on the Hot Dance Singles Sales, as well as number five on the Hot Dance Club Play. The track received universal acclaim, with praise coming from Anastacia's new musical sound as well as her new singing sound found in the opening of the song being compared to Evanescence's Amy Lee. "Left Outside Alone" received universal acclaim from critics. AllMusic editor Matthew Chisling wrote "Stronger tracks on the album include "Left Outside Alone,"..., on which Anastacia berates the listener with cries of frustration in pop/rock at its finest." Caroline Sullivan of "The Guardian" wrote "Apparent references pop up: "It's not OK, I don't feel safe," runs the chorus to Left Outside Alone." "The Independent" editor Andy Gill said that this song is "the source of the vulnerability." Dom Passantino of "Stylus Magazine" wrote "Left Outside Alone" starts off as if we're being sang to by the Holy Ghost (assuming Kate Bush is the Father and Tori Amos is the Son), over, yes, exactly the same chords that oversaw "Daredevil"... Then Anastacia switches style back to her normal voice… calling it normal seems a fallacy." He later praised the song with these words "genuinely interesting, genuinely experimental, and genuinely good single." Yahoo! Music editor Dann Ginoe praised the song: "With a high-pitched gothic quiver floating atop ambient brooding, "Left Outside Alone"'s opening strains could easily have her mistaken for Evanescence's Amy Lee.
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[
"Alone at Last (song) \"Alone at Last\" is a song written by Johnny Lehmann and performed by Jackie Wilson featuring Dick Jacobs and His Orchestra. It was featured on his 1963 album \"Sings the World's Greatest Melodies\". The song's melody was adapted from Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's, Concerto No. 1 in B Flat Minor \"Alone at Last\" reached No. 8 on the U.S. pop chart, No. 11 in Australia, No. 20 on the U.S. R&B chart, and No. 50 on the UK Singles Chart in 1960.",
"Lou Handman Lou Handman (September 10, 1894 – December 9, 1956) was an American composer. Born in New York City, in his early career he toured in vaudeville shows in Australia and New York. Handman worked closely with Roy Turk. They went on to make such chart-topping hits as: Other hits were: Handman died in Flushing, New York in 1956 and was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1975.",
"I'll Walk Alone \"I'll Walk Alone\" is a 1944 popular song with music by Jule Styne and lyrics by Sammy Cahn. The song was written for the 1944 musical film \"Follow the Boys\", in which it was sung by Dinah Shore, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song but lost to “Swinging on a Star”. Shore also released the song as a single which became her first #1 hit on the \"Billboard\" charts. Like other songs that came out during the World War II years such as \"Till Then,\" it reflects the enforced separation of couples caused by the war. While \"Till Then\" is written from the point of view of the soldier wanting his lover to wait for him, \"I'll Walk Alone\" is written from the point of view of the stay-at-home lover, promising to be true.",
"Leave Me Alone (Let Me Cry) \"Leave Me Alone (Let Me Cry)\" is a song released in 1958 by Dicky Doo & the Don'ts, a recording alias of Gerry Granahan. The song's melody is based on the Battle Hymn of the Republic. The song spent nine weeks on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100, reaching No. 44, while reaching No. 47 on the \"Cash Box\" Top 100, and No. 29 on Canada's CHUM Hit Parade.",
"Alone (Why Must I Be Alone) \"Alone (Why Must I Be Alone)\" is a popular song written by Morty Craft with lyrics written by Craft's wife, Selma. . Craft owned a record label, and produced the recording by The Shepherd Sisters on that label. While it was the only hit for The Shepherd Sisters in the United States reaching No. 18 on the \"Billboard\" chart, on November 11, 1957. in the United Kingdom The Shepherd Sisters' version also charted in the UK, reaching No. 14. A remake of the song by The Four Seasons charted in 1964, reaching its peak \"Billboard\" Hot 100 position at No. 28, on July 18. \"Alone (Why Must I Be Alone)\" also went to No. 8 on the Canadian singles chart. It was the act's last hit single on Vee Jay Records, as The Four Seasons had already left the label at the beginning of 1964 in a royalty dispute.",
"Solitary Man (song) \"Solitary Man\" is a song that was written and composed by American musician Neil Diamond, who himself initially recorded the song for BANG Records in late January 1966. It has since been covered many times by such artists as Billy Joe Royal, B.J. Thomas, Jay and the Americans, T. G. Sheppard, Gianni Morandi, The Sidewinders, Chris Isaak, Johnny Cash, Johnny Rivers, HIM, Crooked Fingers, Cliff Richard, Ólöf Arnalds, Theuns Jordaan and Farhad Mehrad. Recorded in late January 1966 and initially released on BANG Records in April 1966, \"Solitary Man\" was Diamond's debut single as a recording artist, having already had moderate (but accidental) success as a songwriter for other artists; their versions of the songs he had already written and composed were released before his \"own\" versions of them were. By July, the track had become a minor hit, rising to #55 on the U.S. pop singles chart. It would then be included on Diamond's first album, \"The Feel of Neil Diamond,\" which he released in August 1966. The song is a \"ballad of a loner looking for love.\" While nominally about young romantic failure, lines in the lyrics that read: have been closely identified with Diamond himself, as evinced by a 2008 profile in \"The Daily Telegraph:\" \"This is the Solitary Man depicted on his first hit in 1966: the literate, thoughtful and melodically adventurous composer of songs that cover a vast array of moods and emotions...\" Indeed, Diamond himself would tell interviewers in the 2000s, \"After four years of Freudian analysis, I realized I had written 'Solitary Man' about \"myself\".\" \"Solitary Man's\" dynamic melody, matched with the melancholic universality of its lyrics, would make the song an attractive target for later interpretations. After Diamond had renewed commercial success with Uni Records at the end of the decade, BANG Records re-released \"Solitary Man\" as a single and it reached No. 21 on the U.S. pop charts in the summer of 1970. It also reached No. 6 on the Easy Listening chart. \"Billboard\" praised the \"solid dance beat and excellent production backing.",
"Don't Leave Me Lonely \"Don't Leave Me Lonely\" is a song by the Canadian musician Bryan Adams featured on his 1983 album \"Cuts Like a Knife\". Written by Adams, collaborator Jim Vallance and late Kiss drummer Eric Carr, the song's origin dates back to sometime in 1981 or 1982 when Adams was working with the band on material for their \"Killers\" album. Adams and Carr began working on the song, which Carr wrote the music and lyrics of the chorus before Adams relocated to Canada and finished the song with Vallance. Carr made a demo of the song for possible inclusion on Kiss' 1982 album \"Creatures of the Night\", but the song didn't make it on the album as it didn't fit in with the rest of the material.",
"Left Alone '86 Left Alone '86 is an album by jazz pianist Mal Waldron and saxophonist Jackie McLean released on the Japanese Paddle Wheel label in 1986. The album is a sequel to Waldron's 1959 recording \"Left Alone\", on which McLean played on the title track. The AllMusic review by Ron Wynn awarded the album 4½ stars stating \"Although he cannot maintain the same nonstop pace he had in the early '60s, Jackie McLean still plays magnificently. He demonstrated that repeatedly on this 1986 duo date with pianist Mal Waldron, whose lovely countermelodies, complementary solos, darting phrases, and supporting accompaniment proved a perfect contrast to McLean's forays. He is lyrical and engaging on some tracks; his explosive side emerges on others\".",
"Left Boy Ferdinand Sarnitz (born 17 December 1988), known by his stage name Left Boy, is an Austrian singer and producer from Vienna, Austria. Sarnitz was born on 17 December 1988 in Vienna, Austria to Austrian musician André Heller and Sabina Sarnitz. He attended the American International School of Vienna and graduated in 2007. Sarnitz spent much of his free time at school rapping. At the age of 18, Sarnitz went to New York City to study audio engineering at the Institute of Audio Research for a year. After living in his hometown Vienna for a short while, he decided to move to Brooklyn to live in a shared apartment with two directors, a producer and a photographer. In December 2010, Sarnitz released his first mixtape \"The Second Coming\" for free download. In mid-2011, he started making music videos for all of the songs. Sarnitz often uses samples for his English songs which haven't been released for usability which is why an official sound carrier couldn't be released. Even though he hadn't been signed to a record label, he was able to perform at festivals in 2012, including \"Sea of Love\" and \"HipHop Open\". Live, he is accompanied by the dance group \"Urban Movement\". Sarnitz has a son called Yves-Louis. He cites Wu-Tang Clan, Oxmo Puccino, De La Soul, Atmosphere, Ugly Duckling, Daft Punk, Édith Piaf, Nina Simone, Oumou Sangaré, and Gipsy Kings as his inspirations. In 2015, he rapped in the Official Theme Tune for the Eurovision Song Contest 2015 \"Building Bridges\".",
"Eddie Snyder Edward Abraham Snyder (February 22, 1919 – March 10, 2011) was an American composer and songwriter. Snyder is credited with co-writing the English language lyrics and music for Frank Sinatra's 1966 hit, \"Strangers in the Night\". Snyder was born in New York City on February 22, 1919. He studied piano at the Juilliard School before taking a job as a songwriter at the Brill Building. Eddie Snyder died on March 10, 2011, in Lakeland, Florida, at the age of 92."
] |
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[
"New York"
] |
Are both Boriduiyeh and Briceni, Dondușeni located in the same country?
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Briceni, Dondușeni Briceni () is a village in Dondușeni District, in northern Moldova.
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[
"Briceni District Briceni () is a district () in the north-west of Moldova, with the administrative center at Briceni. The other major city is Lipcani. As of January 1, 2011, its population was 75,300. The first documentary attestation dates back to district towns June 17, 1429. Such localities: Lipcani, Larga, Mihăileni, Șirăuți are mentioned first in the period 1429–1433. In July 1429, reign of Moldova Alexander the Good Dan Uncleata had established him several villages in the region of the district today. In 1562 is first attested Briceni city under the name of the land Adicăuți, Hotin, which gave him his Despot Voda to Vartic. Lipcani Tatars in 1699 are displaced living in the city which they called, being displaced to Kamianets-Podilskyi. In 1788 Austrian military administration Briceni found in 56 households. In 1812 after the Treaty of Bucharest, Moldova is occupied by Russian Empire in the period 1812-1918 as the district is under Russian administration. In 1877 the region is experiencing an epidemic of plague. In 1882 a drought strikes the district. In 1897 the city population Briceni of 7446, 96.5% were Jewish. In 1918 with the Union of Bessarabia with Romania entering the land Hotin district region. In 1940 the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with Bessarabia Briceni is occupied by the USSR. In 2004 the population was 78.400 inhabitants of the district. Located in the extreme northwest of the Republic of Moldova, the district borders Ukraine in the north, Ocnița District in the east, Edineț District in the south, and Romania in the west, across the river Prut. Criva village located in the district is the western point of the Republic of Moldova coordinates: 48 ° 16'20 \"N 26 ° 40'23\" E. District located on the Plateau of Moldavia, has a relief with a mean fragmentation. With a low land sliding process. Maximum altitude in the district is located near the village Bălcăuți, reaching heights of 260 m.",
"Corjeuți Corjeuți is a village in Briceni District, Moldova.",
"Boruiyeh Boruiyeh (), also rendered as Burruiyeh, may refer to:",
"Tabani, Briceni Tabani (also Tabany, Tabanʼ, Taban') is a village in Briceni District, Moldova. It lies at an elevation of 254 m.",
"Brînzeni Brînzeni is a village in Edineț District, Moldova.",
"Brđani, Brus Brđani () is a village in the municipality of Brus, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 198 people.",
"Boruiyeh, Fars Boruiyeh (, also Romanized as Borūīyeh; also known as Būrrū’īyeh) is a village in Tujerdi Rural District, Sarchehan District, Bavanat County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 85, in 20 families.",
"Baraboi, Dondușeni Baraboi is a village in Dondușeni District, Moldova.",
"Tețcani Tețcani is a village in Briceni District, Moldova.",
"Caracușenii Caracușenii may refer to one of two places in Briceni District, Moldova:"
] |
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[
"no"
] |
What is the date of birth of the director of film Hearts Of Oak (Film)?
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Hearts of Oak (film) Hearts of Oak is a 1924 American drama film based upon the play by James A. Herne and directed by John Ford. The film is considered to be lost.
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[
"James Bogle James Bogle (b 1959) is an Australian director and writer of films and TV.",
"James Ivory James Francis Ivory (born June 7, 1928) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. For many years, he worked extensively with Indian-born film producer Ismail Merchant, his domestic as well as professional partner, and with screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. All three were principals in Merchant Ivory Productions, whose films have won seven Academy Awards; Ivory himself has been nominated for four Oscars, winning one. Ivory's directorial work includes \"A Room with a View\" (1985), \"Maurice\" (1987), \"Howards End\" (1992), and \"The Remains of the Day\" (1993). For his work on \"Call Me by Your Name\" (2017), which he wrote and produced, Ivory won awards for Best Adapted Screenplay from the Academy Awards, British Academy of Film and Television Arts, Writers Guild of America, the Critics' Choice Awards, and the Scripter Awards, among others. Upon winning the Oscar and BAFTA at the age of 89, Ivory became the oldest-ever winner in any category for both awards. Ivory was born in Berkeley, California, the son of Hallie Millicent (née de Loney) and Edward Patrick Ivory, a sawmill operator. He grew up in Klamath Falls, Oregon. He attended the University of Oregon, where he received a degree in fine arts in 1951. Ivory is a recipient of the Lawrence Medal, UO's College of Design's highest honor for its graduates. His papers are held by UO Libraries' Special Collections and University Archives. He then attended the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts, where he directed the short film \"Four in the Morning\" (1953). He wrote, photographed, and produced \"Venice: Theme and Variations\", a half-hour documentary submitted as his thesis film for his master's degree in cinema. The film was named by \"The New York Times\" in 1957 as one of the ten best non-theatrical films of the year. He graduated from USC in 1957. Ivory met producer Ismail Merchant at a screening of Ivory's documentary \"The Sword and the Flute\" in New York City in 1959. In May 1961, Merchant and Ivory formed the film production company Merchant Ivory Productions. Merchant and Ivory were long-term life partners.",
"Karel Steklý Karel Steklý (9 October 1903 – 5 July 1987) was a Czech film director. He is most famous for his film \"Siréna\" (1947) for which he won the Golden Lion, and \"The Good Soldier Schweik\" (1957).",
"José Luis Madrid José Luis Madrid (April 11, 1933 – July 19, 1999) was a Spanish screenwriter, producer and film director.",
"Obi Emelonye Obi Emelonye is a Nigerian film director. He is known for directing award-winning films such as \"Last Flight to Abuja\" (2012), \"The Mirror Boy\" (2011), and \"Onye Ozi\" (2013). In 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic, which shut down businesses globally, Obi Emelonye became the first film director to make a movie via Zoom, by working remotely with cast members in London and Lagos. The movie, Heart 2 Heart, received critical acclaim from major media outlets all over the world. Obi Emelonye, a former professional footballer and law professional, graduated from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, with BA (Hons) Theatre Arts degree (1990). He went on to study for an LLB Law degree from the University of Wolverhampton (1998). He completed a post-graduate degree in Legal Practice from London Metropolitan University (2002) and practised Law for a few years before focusing on his first love, film. In 2019, Obi Emelonye acquired certifications to become a Chartered Management consultant. He is a member of the UK Directors Guild as well as the British Film Institute (BFI).",
"Joshy Mathew Joshy Mathew (Malayalam: ജോഷി മാത്യു) an Indian film director in Malayalam cinema, started his career in 1984 as an assistant to renowned director P. Padmarajan. In 1992 he made feature debut with Nakshatra Koodaram (1992). Then followed Oru Kadankatha Pole (1993), Rajadhani (1994), Man of the Match (1996), Pathaam Nilayile Theevandy (Train in the 10th Floor)(2009), Upadesiyude Makan (2010), Black Forest (2013) and In a land far away (2018).",
"Edward José Edward José (5 July 1865 – 18 December 1930) was a Belgian film director and actor of the silent era. He directed 42 films between 1915 and 1925. He also performed in 12 films between 1910 and 1916.",
"The Heart of a Nation The Heart of a Nation () is a 1943 French drama film directed by Julien Duvivier who co-wrote screenplay with Marcel Achard and Charles Spaak. The film stars Raimu, Michèle Morgan and Louis Jouvet. The film follows a family in Montmartre from the Franco-Prussian War to World War II. An American release featured an introduction by Charles Boyer and scenes of the German entry into Paris. Louis Jourdan played the on screen brother of his real life brother, Pierre. Filming started in late 1939 but was interrupted by the war. The film was released in New York before France. On January 25, 2005, the American version of the film that is dubbed into English and features a prologue by Charles Boyer was released by Alpha Video on DVD .",
"Beto Brant Beto Brant (born 1964) is a Brazilian film director.",
"T. V. Chandran T. V. Chandran (born 23 November 1950) is an Indian film director, screenwriter, and actor, predominantly working in Malayalam cinema. Born in a Malayali family in Telicherry, Chandran worked as a Reserve Bank of India employee before entering into the film industry. He started his film career as an assistant director to P. A. Backer. He also acted the lead role in Backer's highly acclaimed political drama \"Kabani Nadi Chuvannappol\" (1975). He made his directorial debut with the unreleased feature \"Krishnan Kutty\" (1981), and followed this with the Tamil film \"Hemavin Kadhalargal\" (1985). Chandran came into prominence after \"Alicinte Anveshanam\" (1989), which was nominated for the Golden Leopard at the Locarno International Film Festival. This was followed with \"Ponthan Mada\" (1993), his most famous film to-date. Chandran is most known for his art-house films which have references to history and undertones of politics and feminism. He is also known for his trilogy on 2002 Gujarat riots, consisting of \"Kathavasheshan\" (2004), \"Vilapangalkappuram\" (2008) and \"Bhoomiyude Avakashikal\" (2012). Other highly acclaimed films include \"Mangamma\" (1997), \"Dany\" (2001) and \"\" (2003). Chandran has won several film awards including six National Film Awards and ten Kerala State Film Awards. In addition to these, he is a recipient of a number of awards at various International film festivals. T. V. Chandran was born in Telicherry (Thalassery), Malabar District, Madras Presidency, the present day Kannur District, Kerala, to Narayanan and Karthyayini Amma. After graduating with a degree from Christ College, Irinjalakuda, and a post graduation from Farook College, University of Calicut, he embarked on a career as a Reserve Bank of India employee before starting his film career. In his college days, Chandran was sympathetic to naxalite ideology and was closely associated with the Communist Party. Chandran's son Yadavan Chandran and brother Soman are also filmmakers. Yadavan has directed docu-films and has assisted Chandran in many of his films."
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[
"February 1, 1894"
] |
Who is the father of the director of film The Priest'S Children?
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The Priest's Children The Priest's Children () is a 2013 Croatian comedy film directed by Vinko Brešan. Don Fabijan (Krešimir Mikić) is a young priest who comes to serve on an unnamed small island in the Adriatic. In order to help increase birth rate on the island, he decides to pierce condoms before they are sold. He therefore teams up with the newsagent Petar (Nikša Butijer) and the pharmacist Marin (Dražen Kühn). After they abolish all forms of birth control on the entire island, the consequences become more and more complicated. The film was seen by 33,759 viewers during its opening weekend, which is the best opening of a Croatian film since the country's independence in 1991.
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"Terence Davies Terence Davies (born 10 November 1945) is an English screenwriter, film director, novelist and actor, seen by many critics as one of the greatest British filmmakers of the present. He is best known as the writer and director of autobiographical films like \"Distant Voices, Still Lives\" (1988), \"The Long Day Closes\" (1992) and collage film \"Of Time and the City\" (2008), as well as literature adaptions like \"The House of Mirth\" (2000). Davies was born in Kensington, Liverpool, Merseyside, the youngest of ten children of working-class Catholic parents. Though he was raised Catholic by his deeply religious mother, he later rejected religion and considers himself an atheist. After leaving school at sixteen Davies worked for ten years as a shipping office clerk and as an unqualified accountant before leaving Liverpool to attend Coventry Drama School. While he was there he wrote the screenplay for what became his first autobiographical short, \"Children\" (1976), filmed under the auspices of the BFI Production Board. After this introduction to film-making Davies went to the National Film School, completing \"Madonna and Child\" (1980), a continuation of the story of Davies's alter ego, Robert Tucker, covering his years as a clerk in Liverpool. Three years later he completed the trilogy with \"Death and Transfiguration\" (1983), in which he hypothesizes the circumstances of his death. These works went on to be screened together at film festivals throughout Europe and North America as \"The Terence Davies Trilogy\", winning numerous awards. Davies, who is gay, frequently explores gay themes in his films. Due to funding difficulties and his refusal to compromise, Davies's output has been comparatively sporadic, with only seven feature films released to date. Davies's first two features, \"Distant Voices, Still Lives\" and \"The Long Day Closes\", are autobiographical films set in Liverpool in the 1940s and 1950s. In reviewing \"Distant Voices, Still Lives\" when it was first released Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote that \"years from now when practically all the other new movies currently playing are long forgotten, it will be remembered and treasured as one of the greatest of all English films\". In 2002 critics polled for \"Sight & Sound\" ranked \"Distant Voices, Still Lives\" as the ninth best film of the previous 25 years.",
"The Priest and the Girl (1958 film) The Priest and the Girl (German: Der Priester und das Mädchen) is a 1958 Austrian drama film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Rudolf Prack, Willy Birgel and Marianne Hold. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Isabella Schlichting and Werner Schlichting.",
"Hippolyte Girardot Hippolyte Girardot (born Frédéric Girardot; 10 October 1955) is a French actor, film director and screenwriter. He is the father of actress Ana Girardot.",
"Father (1966 film) Father () is a 1966 Hungarian drama film written and directed by István Szabó. The film is a coming of age story. The main character copes with his childhood loss of his father against the backdrop of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and memories of the earlier dictatorship of the Arrow Cross Party modelled on the German Nazi Party. The film won the Grand Prix at the 5th Moscow International Film Festival and the Special Jury Prize at Locarno, and established Szabó as a director of international stature. The film was also selected as the Hungarian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 40th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. The film was chosen to be part both of Budapest Twelve, a list of Hungarian films considered the best in 1968 and its follow-up, the New Budapest Twelve in 2000.",
"Béla Tarr Béla Tarr (born 21 July 1955) is a Hungarian filmmaker. Debuting with the film \"Family Nest\" (1977), Tarr began his directorial career with a brief period of what he refers to as \"social cinema\", aimed at telling mundane stories about ordinary people, often in the style of cinema vérité. Over the next decade, the cinematic style and thematic elements of his films changed. Tarr has been interpreted as having a pessimistic view of humanity; the characters in his works are often cynical, and have tumultuous relationships with one another in ways critics have found to be darkly comic. \"Autumn Almanac\" (1984) follows the inhabitants of a run-down apartment as they struggle to live together while sharing their hostilities. The drama \"Damnation\" (1988) was lauded for its languid and controlled camera movement, which Tarr would become known for internationally. \"Sátántangó\" (1994) and \"Werckmeister Harmonies\" (2000) continued his bleak and desolate representations of reality, while incorporating apocalyptic overtones; the former sometimes appears in scholarly polls of the greatest films ever made, and the latter received wide acclaim from critics. Tarr would later compete at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival with his film \"The Man from London\", which opened to moderately positive reviews. Frequent collaborators with Tarr include novelist László Krasznahorkai, film composer Mihály Víg, cinematographer Fred Kelemen, actress Erika Bók, and Tarr's then partner Ágnes Hranitzky, who is sometimes credited as a co-director of his last three works. After the release of his film \"The Turin Horse\" (2011), which made many year-end \"best-of\" critics' lists, Tarr announced his definitive retirement from feature-length film direction. In February 2013 he started a film school in Sarajevo, known as film.factory, leaving in 2016. He has since created an installation that features newly shot film sequences, in a 2017 Amsterdam exhibition called \"Till the End of the World\". Tarr was born in Pécs, but grew up in Budapest. His parents were both in the theatre and film industry: his father designed scenery, while his mother worked as a prompter at a theatre for more than 50 years.",
"Tom Priestley Tom Priestley (born 22 April 1932 in London) is a British film and sound editor, whose career spans from 1961 to 1990. Tom Priestley is the only son of the novelist and playwright J. B. Priestley. He was educated at Bryanston School and King's College, Cambridge, where he read English. Upon leaving Cambridge, Priestley found employment at Shepperton Studios and worked in various roles including assistant sound editor. His break came when he worked as assistant editor on the now classic films \"Whistle Down the Wind\" and \"This Sporting Life\". Bryan Forbes and Lindsay Anderson were so impressed by his ability to edit that he soon graduated to supervising editor and then full editor. His first complete edit was the John Krish directed science fiction movie \"Unearthly Stranger\" (1963). From the late sixties to the late eighties he was always in demand and was regarded as one of the world's leading film editors. He has worked on many prize winning films and with many leading directors and producers. These include Karel Reisz, Lindsay Anderson, John Boorman, Roman Polanski, Jack Clayton, James Scott and Blake Edwards. He won a BAFTA in 1967 for his work on \"Morgan – A Suitable Case for Treatment\" and was Academy Award-nominated in 1972 for \"Deliverance\". When production of Roman Polanski's \"Tess\" (1979) became problematic, he was brought in to assist Alastair McIntyre and get the film completed. Priestley edited the 1982 film \"A Shocking Accident\", directed by James Scott, which won the Oscar in 1983 for Best Live Action Short. Since 1990 Priestley has spent his time more in the world lecturing on film editing and handling the estate of his late father. He is currently president of the J. B. Priestley Society and The Priestley Centre for the Arts in Bradford, West Yorkshire.",
" He and his wife also have a United States-born son, Seamus. His wife Rita died on February 24, 2022. In 1985, George made his debut as playwright of \"The Tunnel\", a stage drama based on a real-life 1976 prison escape attempt from Long Kesh. In 1986, he researched the non-fiction book \"The Pizza Connection\", with the late veteran American journalist Shana Alexander. In 1993, he made his debut as screenwriter and assistant director with \"In the Name of the Father\", starring Daniel Day-Lewis, and directed and co-written by Jim Sheridan. The film was nominated for seven Academy Awards including best adapted screenplay for George and Sheridan. He wrote the screenplay for and directed the film \"Some Mother's Son\", starring Helen Mirren and Fionnula Flanagan, for which he was named Young European Director of the Year, in 1996. From 2000 to 2004, he served as executive producer and co-creator of the CBS television series \"The District\", which starred Craig T. Nelson, David O'Hara and Lynne Thigpen. He and Billy Ray received screenplay credits for the World War II drama \"Hart's War\" in 2002. He earned his second Academy Award nomination in 2004 for directing, producing and co-writing \"Hotel Rwanda\", which starred Don Cheadle and Sophie Okonedo. The film received three Academy award nominations, including best original screenplay. Hotel Rwanda was honored with the Cinema for Peace Award for the Most Valuable Film of the Year at the Cinema for Peace Gala in Berlin. Along with screenwriter William Monahan and musician Van Morrison, George was honoured at the 2nd Annual Oscar Wilde Honoring Irish Writing in Film ceremony, held at the Ebell Wilshire in Los Angeles, California on 22 February 2007. Later that year, he directed \"Reservation Road\", starring Joaquin Phoenix, Jennifer Connelly, Mark Ruffalo and Mira Sorvino. In 2010 George wrote and directed the short film \"The Shore\". His daughter, Oorlagh produced the film, which was filmed over six days outside George's home in County Down, Northern Ireland. On 26 February 2012, \"The Shore\" won the Academy Award for best Live Action Short Film. In 2012, George wrote, directed and produced the feature film \"Whole Lotta Sole\".",
"Armand Mastroianni Armand Mastroianni (born August 1, 1948) is an American film director and producer. Armand Mastroianni's directorial debut was the 1980 horror film \"He Knows You're Alone\" which was also the screen debut of actor Tom Hanks. He has directed some studio films such as \"The Celestine Prophecy\", the bulk of his career has mainly been focused on directing television films, such as \"The Ring,\" \"First Daughter,\" \"One of Her Own\", and Robin Cook's \"Invasion,\" and television dramas, such as \"Dark Shadows\" and \"Nightmare Cafe.\" He is currently producing and directing material for his production company. He is the father of Paul Mastroianni, who is also pursuing a career in filmmaking.",
"Father of Mercy Father of Mercy () is a 2004 Italian television movie directed by Cinzia Th. Torrini. The film is based on real life events of Roman Catholic priest and then Blessed Carlo Gnocchi. The film describes the life of Father Carlo Gnocchi, and Italian priest who dedicated himself to minister to wounded and dying soldiers during World War Two, and the war's victims in Italy. Gnocchi volunteered to be the military Chaplain on the battle front, following which, he started a foundation to aid the children victims of the war.",
"Thorold Dickinson Thorold Barron Dickinson (16 November 1903 – 14 April 1984) was a British film director, screenwriter, film editor, film producer, and Britain's first university professor of film. In the years prior to 2003 Dickinson's work received much praise, with fellow director Martin Scorsese describing him as \"a uniquely intelligent, passionate artist... They're not in endless supply.\" Of Norwegian descent, his father was the Archdeacon of Bristol from 1921 to 1927, Dickinson was educated at Clifton College and Keble College, Oxford where he read theology, history and French. He was sent down from Oxford in his last year because his interest in theatre and film caused him to neglect his studies; he was inspired by lectures given by Edward Gordon Craig. During his time at Oxford he interrupted his studies to observe the film industry in France where he worked with George Pearson, the father of an Oxford friend. For Pearson he wrote the scenario of \"The Little People\" (1926). Following this he observed the American industry's transition to sound in New York in 1929. In the 1920s and 1930s he was active in the London Film Society, being responsible for the technical presentation of films. At the LFS, he helped introduce the work of the Soviet directors Sergei Eisenstein and Dziga Vertov to British audiences, and in 1937 staged a notable programme protesting the Italian invasion of Abyssinia, Record of War. Dickinson worked as a film editor on such features as \"Love's Option\" (1928), \"Auld Lang Syne\" (1929), \"Loyalties\" (1933) and \"Sing As We Go!\" (1934). His first directorial experience was on \"Java Head\" (1934), when he took over after J. Walter Ruben became ill and was unable to continue. He became Vice-President of the Association of Cine-Technicians in 1936, observing the Soviet film industry for the craft union the following year, remaining in the post until 1953. Dickinson's first feature film, starring Lionel Atwill and Lucie Mannheim, was \"The High Command\" (1937), for which he formed the short-lived Fanfare Pictures with Gordon Wellesley. He visited Spain during the Civil War and made two documentary shorts, one of which \"Spanish ABC\" (1938) \"is a sober advocacy of the educational policy of Republican Spain\"."
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"Ivo Brešan"
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Which country the director of film The Greyhound Limited is from?
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Greyhound (film) Greyhound is a 2020 American war film directed by Aaron Schneider and starring Tom Hanks, who also wrote the screenplay. The film is based on the 1955 novel "The Good Shepherd" by C. S. Forester, and also stars Stephen Graham, Rob Morgan, and Elisabeth Shue. The plot follows a commander of the US Navy on his assignment in command of a multi-national escort group defending an Allied merchant ship convoy under attack by German submarines in early 1942 during the Battle of the Atlantic, only months after the U.S. officially entered World War II. "Greyhound" was initially scheduled to be theatrically released in the United States on June 12, 2020, by Sony Pictures Releasing, but was eventually canceled by the COVID-19 pandemic after previously being delayed indefinitely. The distribution rights were then sold to Apple TV+, which released the film digitally on July 10, 2020. It received positive reviews from critics, with praise for the action sequences and effective use of its 90-minute runtime. At the 93rd Academy Awards, the film earned a nomination for Best Sound. During the Battle of the Atlantic, convoy HX-25, consisting of 37 Allied ships, is making its way to Liverpool. The convoy's escort consists of the USS "Keeling" DD-548, radio call sign "Greyhound", captained by Commander Ernest Krause of the United States Navy; the British Tribal-class destroyer HMS "James", call sign "Harry"; the Polish "Grom"-class destroyer ORP "Viktor", call sign "Eagle"; and the Canadian , HMCS "Dodge" K136, call sign "Dicky". Krause is overall commander of the escort ships, but despite his seniority and extensive naval education, it is his first wartime command. The convoy enters the "Black Pit", the Mid-Atlantic gap where they will be out of range of protective air cover. High-frequency direction finding from the convoy flagship intercepts several German transmissions, indicating the presence of U-boats. Greyhound identifies a surfaced sub heading towards the convoy and moves to attack. The submarine tries to slip under Greyhound, but Krause maneuvers his ship above the U-boat and sinks it with a full pattern of depth charges. The crew's jubilation is cut short as they soon receive reports of distress rockets at the rear of the convoy.
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"Such a Greyhound Such a Greyhound () is a 1931 German musical comedy film directed by Carl Heinz Wolff and starring Ralph Arthur Roberts, Max Adalbert, and Lucie Englisch.",
"Tracks (2013 film) Tracks is a 2013 Australian drama film directed by John Curran and starring Mia Wasikowska and Adam Driver. It is an adaptation of Robyn Davidson's memoir of the same name, chronicling the author's nine-month journey on camels across the Australian desert. It was shown at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival (Special Presentation) and the 70th Venice International Film Festival 2013 (in Official Competition). It premiered in Australia as the opening film at the Adelaide Film Festival on 10 October 2013. The film has been shown at several other film festivals, including London, Vancouver, Telluride, Dubai, Sydney OpenAir, Dublin and Glasgow. In 1977, Robyn Davidson travels from Alice Springs across of Australian deserts to the Indian Ocean with her dog and four dromedaries. National Geographic photographer Rick Smolan documents her journey. There were five attempts in the early 1980s and 1990s to adapt the book as a film. In 1993, Julia Roberts was attached to star in a planned Caravan Pictures adaptation. The project eventually fell apart. In May 2012, it was reported that Mia Wasikowska would play Robyn Davidson in a John Curran-directed adaptation. In August, Adam Driver was cast as Rick Smolan. The screenplay was written by Marion Nelson. Finance was sourced from Screen Australia, the South Australian Film Corporation, Adelaide Film Festival, Deluxe Australia, pre-sales, and Canada's Aver Media Finance. With a US$12 million budget, the film began shooting on 8 October 2012. It was filmed in South Australia and the Northern Territory. Julie Ryan was a co-producer. \"Tracks\" was released to DVD and Blu-ray on 25 June 2014. \"Tracks\" received mainly positive reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 82% based on 129 reviews with an average score of 7/10. The critical consensus states, \"What \"Tracks\" lacks in excitement, it more than makes up with gorgeous cinematography and Mia Wasikowska's outstanding performance.\" The film also has a score of 78 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 34 critics, indicating \"generally favorable reviews\". Leonard Maltin gave \"Tracks\" 3.",
"Eoin Duffy Eoin Duffy (1983, Tullow Ireland) is an Irish director of animation now living and working in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Eoin has created a body of independent work that has gone on to secure multiple accolades including three Oscar accredited festival wins, a nomination for the 2014 European Film Awards a shortlisting for the 86th Academy Awards, and a nomination at the 5th Canadian Screen Awards.",
"The Wild Dogs The Wild Dogs is a Canadian drama film, directed by Thom Fitzgerald and released in 2002. Set in Romania, the film is an examination of the moral and ethical compromises that people can be forced into when living in poverty. The film debuted at the 2002 Toronto International Film Festival. Fitzgerald acts in the film as Geordie, a pornographer sent to Romania by his boss Colin (Geraint Wyn Davies) to scout for young girls for the company. On the flight he meets Victor (David Hayman), a Canadian diplomat based in Romania who has just been diagnosed with cancer and needs Geordie's help when they arrive in Bucharest, where he in turn meets Victor's wife Natalie (Alberta Watson) and daughter Moll (Rachel Blanchard). As he is actually exposed to conditions in the city, however, Geordie's perspective on his job changes; instead of photographing young women for sexual exploitation, he starts photographing people and conditions around the city in a documentary-like manner. The film won four awards at the 2002 Atlantic Film Festival, for Best Canadian Film, Best Director (Fitzgerald), Best Sound Design (Hayward Parrott) and Best Editing (Michael Weir). It received three Genie Award nominations at the 24th Genie Awards in 2004, for Best Supporting Actor (Hayman), Best Editing (Weir) and Best Original Score (Sandy Moore). Fitzgerald picked up an \"Emerging Master\" trophy from the Seattle International Film Festival.",
"Jan-Willem van Ewijk Jan-Willem van Ewijk (born 28 July 1970, Delft) is a Dutch film director, actor and screenwriter. van Ewijk was born in Delft and spent his youth in the Netherlands and California. He moved back to Delft in 1989, where he studied aviation and aerospace engineering at Delft University of Technology where he graduated as an aircraft engineer. After his studies, he worked at Airbus, Beechcraft, Bombardier Aerospace and Monitor Deloitte and was involved in the start-up of an investment bank. In 2002, he quit his job to dedicate himself to a film career. He started writing the script of \" Nu.\" and founded the production house Propellor Film. The film was premiered at the 2006 Netherlands Film Festival, where he received an honorable mention. In 2014, his second feature film, \"Atlantic.\", premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.",
"Ewan Gorman Ewan Gorman is a British film director best known for the children's adventure film, . He was born in Oxford in 1970 and taught film editing at the Brighton Film School from 2006 to 2011. A keen runner, Gorman ran the Brighton Marathon in 2013 to raise funds for the Chestnut Tree House children's hospice. As director: As editor:",
"The Silver Greyhound (1919 film) The Silver Greyhound is a 1919 British silent film directed by Bannister Merwin and starring James Knight, Marjorie Villis and Mary Dibley.",
"Sun Dogs (2006 film) Sun Dogs is a 2006 documentary film directed by Andrea Stewart and distributed by Palm Pictures. Rescued from the mean streets and animal shelters of Kingston, 12 stray dogs are trained to be the stars of Jamaica’s first dogsled racing team. The crew, spearheaded by pop superstar Jimmy Buffett, brings the unlikely meeting of a traditionally snow-bound sport to the sand and surf. The team's dog mushers are given the opportunity of a lifetime as they cultivate their love of animals while receiving an education and traveling the world. The film features interviews with the founder of the Jamaica Dogsled Team and footage of their training.",
"Focus Films Focus Films Ltd. is an independent feature film development and production company in the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1982 by David Pupkewitz and Marsha Levin and is based in Finchley Road, London. Focus's early successes with television documentaries (\"Via Namibia\") and dramas such as \"Kolmanskop\" and \"Othello\", all of which were broadcast by Channel 4, led to its transition to feature film production for the international market starting with Crimetime directed by George Sluizer in 1995. Further films produced by Focus are \"Secret Society\", \"Book of Eve\", and their biggest budget film to date, \"The 51st State\" directed by Ronny Yu. The film stars Robert Carlyle, Samuel L. Jackson. During the hiatus encountered by the independent British film industry between 2004 and early 2007, Focus re-organised its team and strategy and in 2007 co-produced the Bruce Dickinson–scripted film\" Chemical Wedding\", directed by Monty Python veteran Julian Doyle. The film stars Simon Callow and John Shrapnel. It was released theatrically by Warner Music in the UK and Ireland at the end of May 2008.",
"Sled Dogs (film) Sled Dogs is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Fern Levitt and released in 2016. The film explores the Iditarod, raising allegations of animal cruelty among breeders, trainers and kennelers of the event's sled dogs. However, at least one dog keeper tried to obtain a legal injunction against the film's premiere at the Whistler Film Festival, alleging that Levitt had inaccurately depicted the actual dog care ethics of sled dog handlers, misrepresenting footage of an unethical commercial pet breeder rather than speaking to or filming companies actually involved in the care or training of sled dogs. A sled dog operator also filed a similar complaint with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation after the film was broadcast on Documentary Channel in 2017, resulting in a report by CBC ombudsman Esther Enkin. The film received a Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards, for Best Editing in a Documentary (Frank Cassano)."
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"American"
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What nationality is the director of film One Away (Film)?
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One Away (film) One Away is a 1976 American action film directed by Sidney Hayers and starring Patrick Mower, Bradford Dillman, Roberta Durrant and Elke Sommer. Two brothers help their brother escape from a South African jail, sparking a motorcycle manhunt across the local wilderness.
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"Drift Away (film) Drift Away () is a 2021 French drama film written and directed by Xavier Beauvois. The film stars Jérémie Renier, Marie-Julie Maille and Victor Belmondo. The film had its worldwide premiere at the 71st Berlin International Film Festival in March 2021. It is a Les Films du Worso production. The cast include: On February 11, 2021, Berlinale announced that the film would have its worldwide premiere at the 71st Berlin International Film Festival in the \"Berlinale Competition\" section, in March 2021.",
"Awaydays Awaydays is a 2009 British crime drama film directed by Pat Holden and starring Nicky Bell, Liam Boyle and Stephen Graham. It is based on the novel of the same name by Kevin Sampson that was published in 1998. The film follows Paul Carty, a 19-year-old in the aftermath of his mother's death who becomes part of The Pack - a legendary group of football hooligans who dress casual and wear Peter Storm cagoules, carry Stanley knives and follow Tranmere Rovers F.C. The film begins in 1979 with Paul Carty (Nicky Bell), with his sister Molly, (Holliday Grainger) and father, at his mother's graveside. After his sister escorts her dad away from the grave, Carty, looking at his watch, starts to run off. Along his way he gets changed into casual clothing and carries on running until he catches a football special train. Aboard the train, he meets the leader of the football firm, John Godden (Stephen Graham), an ex-soldier who warns him he has no room for runners in his firm and he best stand his ground. When walking through the train, he meets Elvis (Liam Boyle), and Carty reminisces about how they met in a series of flashbacks. We learnt that Carty has always been fascinated by The Pack, observing them at Tranmere games when they fight and trying to dress like them, at which point Baby Millan (Oliver Lee), taunts Carty and threatens him but Elvis leads the other lads away and Carty stands his ground. Carty eventually meets Elvis at a club night and the pair realise they have many things in common from music taste to wanting out of Birkenhead. The pair fantasise about leaving for Berlin. Carty, over their next few meetings, begs Elvis to introduce him to The Pack but Elvis calls them a \"gang of pricks\" and says Carty does not want to be involved. Eventually, after Carty headbutts a rude sales assistant in a record shop to prove his fighting skills, Elvis gives in and tells him to meet him on the train at 12:00 on Saturday. It fast-forwards onto the train again, and The Pack are led by Godden to meet a rival firm. Once there, the two groups scrap and Carty is taken over by a thrill as he is embroiled in the fight.",
"Going Away Going Away () is a 2013 French drama film directed by Nicole Garcia. It was screened in the Special Presentation section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.",
"Playing Away Playing Away is a 1986 TV comedy film directed by Horace Ové, from a screenplay by Caryl Phillips. In the story, an English cricket team, fictitiously named \"Sneddington\" (based in Lavenham, Suffolk), invites a team of West Indian heritage based in Brixton (South London) to play a charity game in support of their \"Third World Week.\" According to Screenonline, \"The gentle comedy of manners and unexpected reversal of white and black stereotypes in \"Playing Away\" contrasts sharply with the stylistic experimentation and the militant denunciations of racial prejudice in director Horace Ové's earlier feature, \"Pressure\" (1975).\" \"New York Times\" reviewer Vincent Canby called it \"witty and wise without being seriously disturbing for a minute\". The cricket match scenes were filmed at Botany Bay Cricket Club in Enfield, London. The film cost £924,000.",
"Away Bus Away Bus is a Ghanaian film produced and directed by Kofi Asamoah of Kofas Media and Peter Sedufia of OldFilm Productions. Two sisters try to raise money for their mother who is sick by becoming a bus driver with the help of their friend known to raise money to save their mum.",
"The One That Got Away (1996 film) The One That Got Away is a 1996 ITV television film directed by Paul Greengrass and starring Paul McGann. It is based on the 1995 book of the same name by Chris Ryan telling the true story of a Special Air Service patrol during the Gulf War in 1991. Special Air Service patrol Bravo Two Zero is inserted into Iraq by helicopter to locate and destroy Iraqi Scud missile launchers. En route they find an unexpected group of Bedouin tribesmen and hide until they are noticed by a shepherd and exchange fire with armed fighters. They escape and return to the initial landing point but there is no helicopter waiting for them. While attempting to make contact, the patrol accidentally splits into a group of five soldiers heading to the road to hijack a vehicle and a group of three soldiers heading through the desert. Several days of travel later, seven of the soldiers have either died of hypothermia, been killed or been captured. Corporal Ryan journeys 180 miles to the Syrian border to escape.",
"Fly Away (film) Fly Away is a 2011 American drama film written and directed by Janet Grillo, and starring Beth Broderick, Ashley Rickards, Greg Germann, JR Bourne, and Reno. Made as a SAG Ultra-Low Budget Independent Film, and shot in 14 days, \"Fly Away\" premiered as one of eight out of 2000 submissions in Narrative Competition at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, on March 13, 2011. The film received a limited theatrical release in select cities on April 15, 2011, and was made available on video on demand (VOD), DVD, and Digital on April 26. 10% of proceeds from DVD sales and 15% of proceeds from VOD rentals were donated to Autism Speaks. The film received mostly positive reviews from critics, who commended Rickards' performance. The film won Best Film and Special Jury Prize for Performance (Ashley Rickards) at the Arizona International Film Festival in April 2011, and Honorable Mention from the prestigious Voice Awards, sponsored by the national Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAHMSA). The film's screenplay won the award for the Best International Screenplay from the 2010 Swansea Bay Film Festival in Wales. Jeanne is awakened by crying from her autistic teenage daughter Mandy. Mandy is suffering an anxiety attack, as she has almost every night for months. Jeanne instructs her daughter to \"use her strategies\". Jeanne calms her by singing \"Lady bug, lady bug, fly away home.\" The next morning, Jeanne struggles to get Mandy to school. Jeanne receives a phone call from her freelance business partner, Sue. They are under pressure to complete a project for a major client. Jeanne is interrupted by the school reporting Mandy with another fit. Principal Liz Howell suggests Mandy should go to a different school. Desperate for help, Jeanne calls Mandy's father, Peter, asking if he could take Mandy for the weekend. He makes his usual excuses, and Jeanne turns around and sees Mandy with her laptop deleting her work. The next day, Peter surprises them by showing up, and sweeping Mandy off to the park. Jeanne is enjoying a rare moment of peace when Peter calls, in great distress. Mandy's had another fit, attacking yet another child on the playground. Jeanne rushes to the rescue, and takes control of the situation. The next day, Jeanne takes Mandy out for ice cream to console her after school.",
"A Heartbeat Away A Heartbeat Away is a 2011 Australian musical comedy film about a marching band in a small town. A young man with high aspirations as a musician steps up to become the musical director of the local marching band after his father is hurt in a vehicle accident. He has four weeks to drill the band before a major competition. Filming started in March 2010. The film was financed by Screen Australia, Screen Queensland, Cutting Edge Pty Ltd and Quickfire Films (UK). The film was a box office disappointment, widely considered a commercial and critical flop. During its opening weekend it took $44,204 across 77 screens, giving it a screen average of just $574.",
"One That Got Away \"One That Got Away\" is a song written by Jesse Frasure, Josh Osborne, Matthew Ramsey and Trevor Rosen, and recorded by American country music singer Michael Ray. It is the second single from his second studio album, \"Amos\". \"The Boot\" described the song as \"Ray focuses on enjoying the ride while it lasts and coming out of the relationship with a great story to tell. Summery and upbeat, the song makes for a perfect addition to his festival setlists.\" Ray said that he wanted a \"loose feel\" when recording the song, and said that the song's content of enjoying a relationship reminded him of his upbringing. Ray said that he compared it to the feel of \"Kiss You in the Morning\", and that its content was \"definitely one of those that I have lived\". Sean Hagwell directed the music video, which was filmed in Miami, Florida.",
"Light Years Away Light Years Away () is a 1981 film directed by Alain Tanner. It tells the story of a young man who meets an old man who says he was taught by birds how to fly and is building a flying machine. It is based on a novel by Daniel Odier. Although filmed in English and shot in Ireland, it was made by a Swiss director and produced by companies from France and Switzerland. The film won the Grand Prix at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival."
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"British"
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When is the director of film No Day Without You 's birthday?
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No Day Without You No Day Without You () is a 1933 German comedy film directed by Hans Behrendt and starring Lee Parry, Oskar Karlweis, and Paul Hörbiger.
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"Without Her (film) Without Her () is a Canadian thriller film, directed by Jean Beaudin and released in 2006. The film stars Karine Vanasse as Camille, a woman returning home to Quebec for the first time since leaving for Italy after the disappearance of her mother. The film's cast also includes Marie-Thérèse Fortin, Maxim Gaudette, Linda Sorgini, Isabel Richer, Patrick Goyette, Emmanuel Schwartz and Johanne-Marie Tremblay. Composer Jean Robitaille won the Genie Award for Best Original Score at the 27th Genie Awards for his work on the film.",
"Everyday Is a Holiday Every Day Is a Holiday (; ) is a 2009 film by the Lebanese director Dima El-Horr. The film is on the official selection of 2009 Toronto International Film Festival. It is the first feature film by Dima El-Horr. Three women, of different backgrounds, are on their way to prison to pay a visit to their men on independence day. As the story progresses, this journey becomes a quest for their own independence. Dennis Harvey of \"Variety\" wrote \"A busload of stranded women wander a stark no-man's-land in Dima El-Horr's feature debut\".",
"Kathryn Bigelow Kathryn Ann Bigelow (; born November 28, 1951) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. Covering a wide range of genres, her films include \"Near Dark\" (1987), \"Point Break\" (1991), \"Strange Days\" (1995), \"\" (2002), \"The Hurt Locker\" (2008), \"Zero Dark Thirty\" (2012), and \"Detroit\" (2017). Bigelow is the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director, with \"The Hurt Locker\" the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing, and the BAFTA Award for Best Direction. Kathryn Bigelow is also the first woman to win the Saturn Award for Best Director for the 1995 film \"Strange Days\". Bigelow can also be found on the 2010 \"Time\" 100 list of most influential people of the year. Bigelow was born in San Carlos, California, the only child of Gertrude Kathryn (née Larson; 1917–1994), a librarian, and Ronald Elliot Bigelow (1915–1992), a paint factory manager. Her mother was of Norwegian descent. She attended Sunny Hills High School in Fullerton, California. Bigelow's early creative endeavors were as a student of painting. She enrolled at San Francisco Art Institute in the fall of 1970 and received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in December 1972. While enrolled at SFAI, she was accepted into the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program in New York City. For a while, Bigelow lived as an impoverished artist, staying with painter Julian Schnabel in performance artist Vito Acconci's loft. She had a minor role in Richard Serra's video \"Prisoner's Dilemma\" (1974). Bigelow teamed up with Philip Glass on a real-estate venture in which they renovated distressed apartments downtown and sold them for a profit. Bigelow entered the graduate film program at Columbia University, where she studied theory and criticism and earned her master's degree. Her professors included Vito Acconci, Sylvère Lotringer, and Susan Sontag, as well as Andrew Sarris and Edward W. Said, and she worked with the Art & Language collective and Lawrence Weiner. She also taught at the California Institute of the Arts.",
"Birthday (2019 film) Birthday is a 2019 South Korean drama film directed by Lee Jong-un, starring Sol Kyung-gu and Jeon Do-yeon. The first South Korean film to explore the tragic sinking of the MV Sewol Ferry, it opened the 21st Far East Film Festival on 26 April 2019. Ripped apart by the loss of their eldest son Su-ho (Yoon Chan-young) to the Sewol Ferry tragedy on 16 April 2014, Jung-il (Sol Kyung-gu) and Soon-nam (Jeon Do-yeon) struggle to keep their family together. No longer able to communicate with each other, they must still bring up their surviving daughter Ye-sol (Kim Bo-min). Principal photography began on April 10, 2018, and wrapped on July 6, 2018. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of based on reviews, with an average rating of .",
"With You and Without You With You and Without You (, tr. \"S toboy i bez tebya\") is a 1973 Soviet comedy film directed by Rodion Nakhapetov. The film takes place during the formation of Soviet power. The rich farmer Fedor marries his girlfriend. But it is difficult for her to get used to the farm life and she decides to return to her native village.",
"A Day (film) A Day is a 2017 South Korean mystery thriller film directed by Cho Sun-ho, starring Kim Myung-min and Byun Yo-han. The story starts with a doctor, Kim Joon-young, returning home. His daughter, Eun-jung, dies in a car accident on the same day along with another woman. Kim Joon-young wakes up in what looks like the previous day. He tries to save his daughter but fails, with the day repeating over and over again. The woman's husband also experiences the day repeatedly. They cannot seem to save their loved ones no matter what. Later, they find out that the father of a child whose heart was transplanted without the father's consent and the man who had caused an earlier accident are the two persons whose day is repeating, along with the child father, who is seeking revenge by killing their loved ones. They reconcile to the father after learning that his child's heart is inside of the daughter. Thus, the son does not allow his father to die so they save him so that everything returns to normal. The doctor explains the transplant to the press as the movie ends. \"A Day\" reunites the two main actors Kim Myung-min and Byun Yo-han who previously acted together in the historical drama series \"Six Flying Dragons\". The film inspired a South Indian political drama movie \"Maanaadu\", in which the protagonist is stuck in a time loop leading to a political assassination.",
"Zero Days Zero Days is a 2016 American documentary film directed by Alex Gibney. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival. \"Zero Days\" covers the phenomenon surrounding the Stuxnet computer virus and the development of the malware software known as \"Olympic Games.\" It concludes with discussion over follow-up cyber plan Nitro Zeus and the Iran Nuclear Deal. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes collected 66 reviews as of May 6, 2017, of which 91% were positive. The site's consensus states: \"Factors beyond Gibney's control prevent \"Zero Days\" from offering a comprehensive look at its subject, but the partial picture that emerges remains as frightening as it is impossible to ignore.\" Metacritic gave the film a score of 77/100 based on 23 critics. Writing for RogerEbert.com, Godfrey Cheshire praised \"Zero Days\" as \"Easily the most important film anyone has released this year, it is a documentary that deserves to be seen by every sentient citizen of this country—and indeed the world.\" \"Zero Days\" was among 15 films shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary, but ultimately did not receive an Oscar nomination. The film won a documentary film Peabody Award in 2017 and was nominated for Best Documentary Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America. \"Zero Days\" was released digitally on Amazon Video and iTunes on December 6, 2016, broadcast on BBC Four in the \"Storyville\" strand in the UK on January 16, 2017, and DVD on January 17, 2017.",
"The Writer with No Hands The Writer with No Hands is a 2017 British documentary feature film, which follows unemployed academic Matthew Alford as he tries to establish that the accidental death of Hollywood screenwriter Gary DeVore was, in fact, an assassination by the United States government. The film was screened at venues on 27 June 2017 to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of DeVore's fate and a television edit subsequently shown on VGTV, Rialto Channel, and Means TV. On Friday 27 June 1997, Gary DeVore had been driving home after completing a new film script. He was last seen at a Denny's diner in the Mojave Desert around 1am on the 28th. The subsequent manhunt remained unsuccessful until July 1998 when an amateur detective located fragments of DeVore's car next to the California Aqueduct near Palmdale. The California Highway Patrol's investigation concluded that DeVore must have driven against oncoming traffic along the highway, crashed into the water and drowned in his vehicle. In 2016, director William Westaway raised £4,769 through a successful Kickstarter campaign to fund completion of technical aspects to the production. An alternative 86 minute cut feature had premiered at Hot Docs in 2014 but was pulled from the festival circuit at the end of that year, heavily re-worked, and never distributed. Although Alford produced the 2014 version of the documentary, he characterised the filmmaking process as highly erratic and was not similarly accredited on the final film. The 2014 cut prompted concerns about taste. Cineinstyle called the documentary \"riveting\" but added \"I wouldn't want to be Westaway's friend - or enemy\". It was also dubbed a \"sour\" and \"dubious\" product that \"borders on unethical\". \"The Morning Star\" called the final film \"unmissable\" and \"as tense and telling as any Hollywood fiction\". We Are Cult called it “an engrossing and spookily conceived [film] that certainly raises the pulse and offers up some lingering questions about this utterly bizarre story [and] becomes an even more interesting and layered piece of filmmaking”. The documentary portrayed Alford as abruptly abandoning his research project in favour of an entertainment career.",
"Without You All Is Darkness Without You All Is Darkness (German: Ohne dich wird es Nacht) is a 1956 West German drama film directed by and starring Curd Jürgens. Eva Bartok, René Deltgen and Ursula Grabley also star. The film's sets were designed by the art direction Fritz Maurischat and Ernst Schomer. It was shot at the Gottingen Studios and on location in Hamburg and Kassel.",
"Without You Near Without You Near is the debut album by Markus Schulz, released on October 9, 2005."
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"28 September 1889"
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Are Aycrigg Mansion and 57 Promenade located in the same country?
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Aycrigg Mansion Aycrigg Mansion, located in Passaic, Passaic County, New Jersey, United States, was the home of John Bancker Aycrigg. The mansion was built in 1848 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 29, 1982. The structure currently houses a boy's religious high school, Mesivta Tiferes R' Tzvi Aryeh Zemel.
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"Sundrum Castle Sundrum Castle is located north of Coylton, South Ayrshire, Scotland, by the Water of Coyle. The original castle was built in the 14th century by Sir Robert Wallace, Sheriff of Ayr. This was incorporated into the present mansion, built by the Hamiltons of Sundrum in 1792. The castle is now a category B listed building.",
"Çakırağa Mansion Çakırağa Mansion () is an historical mansion in İzmir Province, Turkey. It is in Birgi town of Ödemiş ilçe (district) at It was commissioned in 1761 by Çakıroğlu Mehmet Bey who was a wealthy merchant. The three storey mansion is situated in a large garden with high embankments. The ground floor is reserved for the stables, the kitchen and the guest room. The first and the second floor are the living quarters. The first floor is the winter and the second floor is the summer floor. A central fireplace heats the first floor. In the second floor there are paintings of İstanbul and İzmir.",
"Promenade Gardens Promenade Gardens is a garden in Georgetown, Guyana. To the south is (Parade Ground), the site of public execution of slaves who participated in the uprising of 1823. The park is separated from the gardens by Middle Street. The park is bound by Carmichael Street to the west, across from which is the State House (president's residence). The other public garden in Georgetown is the larger Botanical Gardens farther from city centre. There is also the modern National Park in the north of the city.",
"Aberdeen Promenade Aberdeen Promenade () is a small urban waterfront park in Aberdeen, Hong Kong. It is located on the north shore of Aberdeen Bay across from Aberdeen Island.",
"Abercairny Abercairny is an estate in the Scottish region of Perth and Kinross. It had the distinction of a short visit by Queen Victoria 12 September 1842, when she wished to see the mansion house, then under construction. The estate, owned by the Moray family since the 13th century, is east of Crieff. It is included in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland.",
"Lofty Promenade Lofty Promenade () is an inclined glacial course, long and wide, in the eastern part of Ross Island, Antarctica. The feature is partly framed between the southern elements of the Kyle Hills and Guardrail Ridge, as it descends east-southeast from near Mount Terror to near the Allen Rocks. The glacial surface is relatively smooth and affords an unobstructed route between the Cape Crozier area and Mount Terror. The name, given by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names in 2000, is allusive and refers to a public place for taking a leisurely walk.",
"Erddig Erddig Hall (; or simply Erddig; ) is a Grade-I listed National Trust property in Wrexham, Wales. Standing south of Wrexham town centre, it comprises a country house built during the 17th and 18th centuries amidst a 1,900 acre estate, which includes a 1,200-acre landscaped pleasure park and the earthworks of a Norman motte-and-bailey castle. Erddig has been described as 'the most evocative Upstairs Downstairs house in Britain' due to the well-rounded view it presents of the lifestyles of all of its occupants, both family and staff. The eccentric Yorke family had an unusual relationship with their staff and celebrated their servants in a large and unique collection of portraits and poems. This collection, coupled with well-preserved servants' rooms and an authentic laundry, bakehouse, sawmill, and smithy, provide an insight into how 18th to 20th century servants lived. The state rooms contain fine furniture, textiles and wallpapers and the fully restored walled garden is one of the most important surviving 18th century gardens in Britain. The first recorded reference to Wrexham was in 1161 to a castle at 'Wristlesham'. This castle was probably constructed in what is now the grounds of Erddig. The remains of a Norman motte and bailey, constructed around 1090, can be found in the park of the later mansion. The fortress was built on a steep-sided promontory and the ramparts were adapted from a prehistoric hillfort and incorporate a section of Wat's Dyke. The original house was built on a dramatic escarpment above the winding Clywedog river between 1684–1689 to the designs of Thomas Webb for Joshua Edisbury of Pentre Clawdd, High Sheriff of Denbighshire. Joshua Edisbury was forced to borrow large sums to fund the project which resulted in his bankruptcy and, in 1716, he was forced to sell Erddig. John Meller, Master of the Chancery, bought the mortgage on Erddig from Sir John Trevor. John Meller refurbished and enlarged the house (including adding two wings in the 1720s). A staunch supporter of the royal house of Hanover, he treated his neighbours with suspicion in what was a strongly Jacobite locality.",
"Asgill House Richmond Place, now known as Asgill House, is a Grade I listed 18th-century Palladian villa on Old Palace Lane in Richmond, London (historically in Surrey), overlooking the River Thames. The house is on the former site of the river frontage and later the brewhouse for the medieval and Tudor Richmond Palace. It is from Charing Cross and was built in 1757–58 by Sir Robert Taylor as a summer and weekend parkland villa beside the River Thames for Sir Charles Asgill, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1761–62. It has been described as a \"among the last villas of importance to be erected on the banks of the Thames\". It was returned to its original appearance in a restoration of 1969–70 by Donald Insall Associates. This included removing the Victorian extensions. Asgill House is now leased from the Crown Estate as a private residence. The rear garden contains a 200-year-old Copper beech tree, one of the Great Trees of London.",
"People's Park, Halifax The People's Park is a park in Halifax, West Yorkshire, England. It was given to the people of Halifax in 1857 by local carpet manufacturer Sir Francis Crossley. The park was originally designed by Joseph Paxton, but suffering neglect in the late 20th century until a major restoration project which started in 1995. It is listed as Grade II* in the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England, and the Crossley Pavilion, a building in the park, is a Grade II* listed building. Crossley had reportedly been impressed by the beauty of the scenery of New England on a visit and returned to Halifax eager \"to arrange art and nature so that they shall be within the walk of every working man in Halifax; that he shall go to take his stroll there after he has done his hard day's toil, and be able to get home without being tired\".",
"The Park Mansion The Park Mansion is a 36-storey condominium tower in Mississauga, Ontario standing 112 metres (369 feet) tall. The building is located at 45 Kingsbridge Garden Circle. It was built in 1990 (architects: Zippan and Barrett) and has over 350 luxury suites, many with views of the Greater Toronto Area. Upon completion, it was the tallest building in Mississauga for an 18-year period until 2008; a year in which it was overtaken by 2 new buildings and tied by a third."
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"no"
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What is the date of death of Frederuna's husband?
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Frederuna Frederuna (or Frederonne, Fridarun; or ; 887–917) was born in Goslar, Hanover to Dietrich Theodorich von Ringelheim, Duke of Saxony and his wife Gisela of Lotharingia. She was the half-sister of Matilda of Ringelheim, who married Henry the Fowler, King of East Francia, Amalrada, Bia, and a brother, Beuve II, the Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne, and the first wife of King Charles III of France, whom she married in 907. She bore Charles six daughters: Ermentrude, Gisela, Frederuna, Adelais, Rotrude and Hildegarde. Frederuna died in 917 and she was succeeded as queen consort by Eadgifu of England, a daughter of Edward the Elder in 919.
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" She died of diabetes on August 7, 1998. A subsequent police investigation found that she had actually given birth to only 14 children, with the remainder being taken in from the streets or given to her by poor women including her cousins. According to police inspector Cristina Rojo, Leontina had perpetrated the fraud to claim food assistance from the Chilean government, and had systematically registered the children in rural civic offices that lacked computerised records to avoid detection. One of the children was also discovered to be the product of an incestuous relationship between her husband, Geraldo, and one of the couple's granddaughters. Geraldo, who was 91 at the time, was said to be a fugitive, while police were also reported to be investigating a number of the couple's other children and relatives for having taken part in the fraud.",
" The intention was that the intended marriage remained a secret, so as not to get in the way of Willem-Alexander's brother Constantijn and Laurentien Brinkhorst, who would marry in May. Ultimately, it was too difficult to keep secret, so on 30 March 2001, Queen Beatrix announced her eldest son's engagement. On 21 May 2001, the bill seeking consent for the marriage was introduced in parliament. On 7 January 2002, the \"ondertrouw\" was published. Zorreguieta became a naturalized Dutch citizen, though she did not convert from Roman Catholicism. It was announced any children born of the marriage would be titled Prince/Princess of the Netherlands and Prince/Princess of Orange-Nassau, with the style of \"Royal Highness\". During the National Reorganization Process, Argentina's most recent dictatorship, Jorge Zorreguieta, Máxima's father, served as Secretary of Agriculture, Livestock, and Fisheries. During this regime, an estimated 10,000–30,000 people were kidnapped and murdered during this and subsequent military regimes before democracy was restored to Argentina in 1983. Zorreguieta claimed he was unaware of the Dirty War while he was a cabinet minister. At the request of the States General, Michiel Baud, a Dutch professor in Latin American studies, carried out an inquiry into the involvement of Zorreguieta in the Dirty War. Baud determined that Máxima's father had not been directly involved in any of the numerous atrocities that took place during that period. However, Baud also concluded that Zorreguieta was almost certainly aware of them; in Baud's view, it was highly unlikely that a cabinet minister would not have known about them. Jorge Zorreguieta's presence at the wedding was debated for months. It was eventually concluded he would not attend. In solidarity, her mother chose not to attend. On 31 January, Queen Beatrix's 64th birthday, there was a black-tie dinner and ball at the Royal Palace of Amsterdam for 500 guests to celebrate the impending wedding and The Queen's birthday. The day before the wedding, there was a lunch and concert at the Royal Concertgebouw attended by 1,600 guests.",
"Fred Mubanda Fred Mubanda (died 17 December 2020) was a Ugandan politician. She was a Member of the Parliament of Uganda from 2011 to 2016. Mubanda died from COVID-19 in December 2020, at age 77.",
"Andrzej Maksymilian Fredro Andrzej Maksymilian Fredro (1620 – 15 June 1679) was a Polish szlachcic and writer. He was born in 1620. Fredro studied at the Cracow Academy. He was castellan of Lwów from 1654 and voivode of the Podolian Voivodeship from 1676. He was Marshal of the Sejm (zwyczajny) from 16 January to 11 March 1652 in Warsaw. At that sejm Władysław Siciński used liberum veto for the first time. Fredro fortified Przemyśl in 1658-1660. He died on 15 June 1679. In his political writing, Fredro argues that liberum veto is necessary for a republic as big as the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. When one region of the Commonwealth falls into crisis, nobles from other regions may not be fully aware of the danger. Decision by majority in the Sejm is dangerous for such a big republic, because it enables the majority to ignore the interests of a particular region which has gotten into difficulty and asks the nation for help. He was married to Katarzyna Gidzińska.",
" The circumstances surrounding Birutė's death are not entirely clear. Between 1381 and 1382 her husband Kęstutis waged a war against his nephew Jogaila who became the Grand Duke of Lithuania and signed a treaty with the Teutonic Knights against Kęstutis. Her husband was arrested and transported to the castle at Kreva. A week later Kęstutis was dead and some chronicles hint that he was murdered. In spite of the circumstances being unclear, one chronicle written by the Teutonic Knights briefly mentioned that Birutė was, for reasons of safety, moved to Brest, Belarus, where she was drowned in fall of 1382 (likely in response to Vytautas escape from Kreva). However, there are no other sources that confirm or refute this claim. Thirty-five years later, a Samogitian delegation to the Council of Constance denied her murder, and another legend claimed that Birutė returned to the shrine where she had served earlier in Palanga, and resumed serving the gods until her death there circa 1389. Legend has it that she was buried in Palanga at the bottom of the hill named in her honor. A cult around Birutė developed and remained strong long after her death. She was considered to be a goddess or the pagan equivalent of a saint by the local people. In 1989 archaeologists found evidence of a pagan sanctuary and observatory, which had existed on the top of Birutė Hill in the late 14th or early 15th century. It was likely built in Birutė's honor. There are many accounts of people praying to Birutė, asking her to bestow good health or fortune upon them. To discourage people from worshiping pagan gods and Birutė's grave, a chapel for Saint George was built on the top of the hill in 1506. In 1869 the chapel was re-built and survives to this day. It is a popular destination for tourists. Birutė Hill is the highest dune at the seaside resort of Palanga on the Baltic Seashore, and now a part of the Palanga Botanical Garden. Archaeological research shows that there was a village at the bottom of the hill in the 10th century.",
" Because of his poor health, it was deemed necessary for the king to marry and sire an heir to the throne. Three candidates were considered qualified royal brides: Eritapeta, the daughter of Aarona Temateireikura who was too young; Dominika, the daughter of Bernardo Putairi, of a former ruling dynasty and Agapa, the daughter of Akakio Tematereikura. Queen Regent Maria Eutokia's preferred Agapa and in the end, he married Agapa. Agapa's grandfather was Maputeoa's uncle Maria Tepano Matua making them second cousins. Queen Agapa predeceased her husband on 7 June 1868. Joseph Gregorio died without leaving issue on 21 November 1868 while still at school on the island of Aukena. Because the throne of Mangareva could only pass to a male heir, after his death, a regency was installed pending the birth of an heir from one of his two surviving sisters Agnès and Philomèle. At the time, other factions in the kingdom were in support of ending the monarchy and either becoming a republic or a theocracy under the guidance of Laval and the French mission. After his death, the Gambier Islands steadily fell under colonial influence, becoming a French protectorate in 1871 and fully annexed to the territory of French Oceania in 1881, today part of the overseas country of French Polynesia. He is buried alongside his father at the Chapelle St-Pierre located behind St. Michael's Cathedral in Rikitea.",
"Elvira Fernández de Córdoba Elvira Fernández de Córdoba y Manrique de Figueroa (born c. 1500, died 1524) was a Spanish noblewoman, the only surviving daughter of Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba (d. 1515), a Spanish general involved with the Italian Wars and viceroy of Naples from 1503 to 1507, and his second wife Maria Manrique de Lara y Espinoza (d. 1527). In 1518 she married a cousin, Luis Fernández de Córdoba. Elvira died quite young in childbirth in 1524, and her husband shortly after, in 1526, on campaign in Italy. She is of some importance for the genealogy of the Grandees of Spain as she inherited the ducal titles created for her father by the Catholic Monarchs. She had four children, Gonzalo (1520–1578), Francisca (d. 1597), Beatriz and María. Her titles passed to Gonzalo, then to Francisca, and then to the son of Beatriz, Antonio Fernández de Córdoba y Cardona (1550–1606).",
" Her husband was José Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Fernández de Córdoba, 8th Marqués de Villafranca del Bierzo, 3rd Marqués de Villanueva de Valdueza, 5th Duque de Fernandina, and 5th principe di Montalbano, (deceased 30 July 1728). He was the son of Fadrique III Alvarez de Toledo y Osorio, 7th Marquis of Villafranca del Bierzo, Grandee of Spain, 2nd Marquis of Villanueva de Valdueza, 4th Duke of Fernandina, 4th Principe di Montalbano, Captain General of the Spanish Galleys, Viceroy of Sicily, member of the Council of State, (27 February 1635 – 1705), and of Manuela Fernández de Córdoba y Cardona, (deceased 1679), the daughter of Antonio de Córdoba, 7 Duke of Sessa, 9 Count of Cabra, and of Teresa Pimentel, from the 9 Counts – Dukes of Benavente.",
" But the effort failed, and Fadrique was denied the succession by the Pact of Caspe. Fadrique married Yolande Louise (Violante Luisa) de Mur and died at Urena in 1438 without issue. He also left a bastard daughter by Sicilian-born Agathe de Pesce, named Violante of Aragon, who died c. 1428. She was married twice: first in 1405 as the second wife (some say she was his mistress) to Enrique Pérez de Guzmán, 2nd Count de Niebla (1371–1436); and second, she married to Enrique's cousin Martín de Guzmán. Martin the Younger led the troops in the conquest of Sardinia in 1409, decisively defeating the ruler of Arborea at the Battle of Sanluri just before his own death.",
"Jorge Guillermo Jorge Pérez y Guillermo (born August 1, 1946) was the husband of Princess Christina of the Netherlands between 1975 and the couple's divorce, which took place towards the end of 1996. He was accordingly brother-in-law to Queen Beatrix between 1980 and 1996. Since 1996 he has generally succeeded in avoiding gratuitous publicity. Jorge Guillermo was born in Havana where he attended school until 1960. Federico Gilberto Pérez y Castillo (1911-1967), his father, was a successful physician with excellent connections to the political establishment. Dr. Edenia Mercedes Guillermo y Marrero (1925-2002), his mother, held a series of senior positions in education administration, by 1960 combining her duties as director of education of the Province of Havana with a lectureship. Jorge Guillermo also had an older brother, named after their father, Gilberto Perez (1943-2015), who later became an American Professor of Film Studies. The decision that the family should leave the country was evidently taken, in the first instance, by Edenia Guillermo. In 1960, following the Cuban Revolution, the Pérez y Guillermo family relocated from Cuba to the United States. Like thousands of other political refugees from Cuba, they settled in Miami, where Jorge Guillermo attended high school. Despite coming from a highly intellectualised family, there are indications that Jorge Guillermo did not share his elder brother's appetite for scholarship. There was evidently no doubt that he would nevertheless complete a course of university-level education. In 1963 he entered Cornell College in Iowa. His student visa expired after a year, but he and his brother were reclassified as refugees due to the political situation in Cuba. He then switched to Monmouth College in Illinois, emerging with an Art History degree in 1968. The transfer had been arranged by his mother, who worked at Monmouth College, between 1964 and 1975, as a professor of Spanish. Between 1965 and 1968 mother and son shared an apartment in the little town. Jorge Guillermo's father died in 1967. In around 1973, Guillermo moved to New York City, where he became involved in the work of the charismatic poet-educator Frank \"Ned\" O'Gorman, a friend whom he had known since 1971."
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"7 October 929"
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Does Cheriyan Kalpakavadi have the same nationality as Chloé Tutton?
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Chloé Tutton Chloé Tutton (born 17 July 1996) is a British breaststroke swimmer. She won a bronze medal in the individual 100 m and a gold in the 4×100 m medley relay events at the 2016 European Championships, and competed for the 2016 Summer Olympics. Tutton was born in Pontypridd, Wales. Tutton took to swimming on holiday, leading her mother to enroll her in local classes. At age 12, coach Dave Haller recruited her, causing Tutton to move to Cardiff to advance her swimming. A bout of glandular fever forced Tutton to take an extended break from swimming at age 16.` Her first international meet was the 2014 Wales Commonwealth Games where she competed in breaststroke and the 400 meter freestyle, placing sixth in the latter event. Following the Commonwealth Games, a dislocated shoulder forced her to take time off from swimming. She did not qualify for the British team for the 2015 World Championships. The 2016 season was Tutton's breakout season as a swimmer. She set a British record in the 200 meter breaststroke at the 2016 British Championships with a time of 2 minutes 22.34 seconds. The record setting time won Tutton the gold medal. Her performance at the competition was just below an automatic qualifying time for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. On 21 April 2016 the selectors announced Tutton had made the British swimming team for the then-upcoming Olympics. At the 2016 European Swimming Championships, Tutton won bronze in the 100 meter breaststroke and placed sixth in the 200 meter breaststroke. She was also part of Great Britain's gold medal winning team in the 4 x 100 medley relay. Tutton finished in fourth place in the 200 meter breaststroke at the 2016 Summer Olympics. She missed earning a place on the podium by 0.06 seconds. Tutton was also part of the British team for the 4 x 100 medley relay, which placed seventh at the games. As of 2016, her swimming coach is Graham Wardell.
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"Cheraldine Oudolf Cheraldine Oudolf (born 4 May 1980) is a Dutch former cricketer. She played 36 Women's One Day International matches for the Netherlands women's national cricket team. She was part of the Netherlands squad for the 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup.",
"Chloe Stewart Chloe Stewart may refer to:",
"C. J. Kuttappan C. J. Kuttappan is a folk artist from Kerala. Kuttappan has performed in the US, Thailand, Singapore, Germany, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Andaman and Nicobar, and Gulf countries. Th Kuttappan is the Chairman of Kerala Folklore Academy and Director, Thayillam - Folk Arts Research Center. Kuttappan has performed on Asianet, Surya, Amrita, Indiavision, JaiHind, Reporter, Doordarshan, Kappa TV, Jeevan. He has performed folk arts, speeches, and engaged in discussions and interviews on AIR, DD. From 2001- 2003 he was the Coordinator, Folk Programmes, at Kairali TV He was born in Chengannur, Pathanamthitta district, the eldest of four children of Kumaradas and Thankamma. His family moved to Udumbanchola in Idukki district when he was in fifth grade. In 1996, he formed his own folk music troupe Thailiyam. Provided vocals and composed folksongs in the following Malayalam movies: He and his wife Sudha have two children, Kala Kannan.",
"Chloe Williams Chloe Williams may refer to:",
"Chloe Ferry Chloe Ferry (born Chloe West Etherington; 31 August 1995) is an English television personality from Newcastle, known for being a cast member in the MTV reality series \"Geordie Shore\". She also took part in the nineteenth series of \"Celebrity Big Brother\" in 2017. On 30 June 2012, Ferry appeared in an episode of \"Sun, Sex and Suspicious Parents\" where her family followed her to Sunny Beach, Bulgaria. On 17 February 2015, it was announced that Ferry had joined the cast of \"Geordie Shore\" making her debut in the tenth series. On 13 January 2017, Ferry entered the \"Celebrity Big Brother\" house taking part in the nineteenth series. She was evicted a week later. Ferry also appeared in the second series of \"Super Shore\" in 2016 for one episode with another \"Geordie Shore\" cast member, Kyle Christie. Ferry was in a relationship with \"Geordie Shore\" co-star Sam Gowland from 2017 to 2019. In July 2020, Ferry announced that she is bisexual.",
"Chloe (2009 film) Chloe is a 2009 erotic thriller film directed by Atom Egoyan, a remake of the 2003 French film \"Nathalie...\". It stars Julianne Moore, Liam Neeson, and Amanda Seyfried in the titular role. Its screenplay was written by Erin Cressida Wilson, based on the earlier French film, written by Anne Fontaine. Despite receiving mixed reviews from critics, the film was a commercial success and it grossed more at the worldwide box office than any of Egoyan's previous films. In a voice-over, Chloe discusses her business as a call girl. Catherine is a gynecologist, and her husband David is a college professor. Catherine suspects David of having an affair after she sees a cell-phone picture of him with a female student. Catherine and David meet Catherine's colleague at a restaurant, where Catherine briefly encounters Chloe in the ladies room. Later that evening, while observing Chloe with her date, she realizes that she is a call girl. At some point after, from her office window, Catherine notices Chloe enter into an upscale bar and surmises that she goes there to meet clients. Catherine goes there looking for Chloe, telling her that she wants to hire her to test David's loyalty. Chloe later tells Catherine that David asked her if he could kiss her, which he did. Catherine is angered but insists that Chloe meet with David again. She asks that Chloe show her the results of her most recent tests for sexually transmitted diseases. Chloe brings the test results to Catherine's office. While there, she meets Catherine's son, Michael, who is there to pick up a tuxedo. They chat briefly and Chloe flirts with him. Over the next few days, Catherine and Chloe meet multiple times, and Chloe describes in explicit detail her encounters with David, which arouses Catherine. During one meeting, Chloe kisses Catherine. Catherine, surprised by this, abruptly leaves. Later, when meeting with David at a get-together, she is taken aback by his awareness of the scent of her lotion; it is the same lotion that Chloe wears. Upset by this, Catherine leaves and meets with Chloe at a hotel. The two go into a hotel room, where Catherine starts undressing Chloe before asking Chloe to tell her how David touches her, visibly aroused. Realizing that Catherine wants her, Chloe seduces Catherine, undresses her and dominates her, having sex with her.",
"Ravi Kalpana Ravi Venkateswarlu Kalpana (born 5 May 1996) is an Indian cricketer. She started her national-level career as a wicket-keeper and right-handed batter in the India women's national cricket team. Her father is a auto rickshaw driver and Kalpana struggled to convince her parents to not get her married off at an early age: \"My most memorable win is so far to convince my family and stop my marriage which could have happened almost abruptly\", she said. Kalpana works for Indian Railways, and lives in Vijayawada. She has B.Com degree from Nalanda Degree College in Vijayawada. She started her career by playing for the state team with an allowance of Rs 4000 from the Andhra Pradesh Cricket Association (APCA). She was initially a part of South Zone division for the Under 16 team. In 2011, she moved on to play for the Under 19 team and then for India Green Team in 2012, to Senior South Zone team in 2014. She was then selected for the Indian Women's Cricket Team in 2015. It was then that she made her international debut in 2015 against New Zealand.",
"Chloe Gibson Chloe Gibson (18 May 1899 – 1 January 1995) was an English theatre and television director, who directed Telefís Éireann's opening night on New Year's Eve 1961. Chloe Gibson was born in Torquay, Devon, England on 18 May 1899. She was the daughter of Walter Ernest Cawdle and Lotte Cawdle (née Saunders). She attended Lauriston Hall, Torquay. She studied painting briefly, but went on to train in speech and drama after World War I. She acted with a repertory in Paignton, Devon and ran a stage school. Her husband was Robert Brenon. After her retirement from Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ), she lived in Dublin until her death on 1 January 1995. Gibson began directing at a number of open-air pageants, producing with Cyril Maude. Her first production was at Christmas 1933 with \"The blue bird\" in the Torquay Pavilion. She was a member of the London fire-fighting services during World War II, while also appearing on stage the Apollo, Scala, and Embassy theatres in numerous plays across 1943 and 1944. Her directorial debut in London was at the New Lindsay, Notting Hill Gate with \"Power Without Glory\" in 1947, starring Kenneth More and Dirk Bogarde. She went on to direct a number of plays, and was director of productions at the Civic theatre, Chesterfield from 1950 to 1953. From the mid 1950s she became a staff producer at the BBC, and was one of the first women to direct plays on television. \"Family Portrait\" was one of her first BBC productions, which she originally directed in 1948 at the Strand theatre. It was a controversial play about the life and death of Christ, and was aired on Easter Sunday 1955. It enraged Cardinal Bernard Griffin of Westminster, who denounced it as offensive to Catholics. Gibson later conceded that the criticism was justified, converting to Catholicism in 1959. Among her notable work with the BBC was directing episodes of \"Maigret\" and \"Pepys' diary\". Gibson moved to Dublin in 1961 when Telefís Éireann was established, directing drama under Hilton Edwards. Her first plays in 1962 were George Bernard Shaw's \"The shewing up of Blanco Posnet\" and William Saroyan's \"Hello Out There\".",
"Chloe Cook Chloe Cook (born 1994) is a British professional triathlete. Cook competes at sprint, standard and Ironman 70.3 distances. Her highest placed results to date in the ITU came at the 2015 Burgas and 2017 Tartu ETU Sprint Triathlon European Cups, finishing second in both races. In 2019 she competed at the 70.3 Ironman Staffordshire, placing 4th female behind Lucy Charles-Barclay, Emma Pallant and Katrina Matthews (nee Rye) with a time of 4:30:20. She came out of the water in second place, maintained this position off the bike through T2 but then lost ground to Pallant and Matthews, with Pallant recording the fastest run split to take second place. Cook's parents are Sarah Coope and Glenn Cook, both former professional triathletes. Cook's younger sister, Beth, has had a number of successes in triathlon as a junior.",
"Tandi Wright Tandi Wright (born 13 May 1970 in Zambia) is a television and film actress from New Zealand. She first gained recognition for portraying Nurse Caroline Buxton on the long running New Zealand soap opera \"Shortland Street\". She is best known for her roles as Fenn Partington on \"Seven Periods with Mr Gormsby\" and Catherine Duvall on \"Nothing Trivial\". She played a recurring role in \"800 Words\" portraying the character Laura Turner. Wright was born in Zambia to New Zealander parents Vernon Wright and Dinah Priestley. She grew up in Wellington and attended Wellington High School and Victoria University of Wellington. She graduated from Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School with a Diploma in Acting in 1994. Her father Vernon Wright, is a former journalist for \"The Listener\" who now lives in Zambia, and her mother Dinah is a writer and actress in Wellington. Wright has two sisters, Nicky (DOC policy advisor) and Justine (film editor), and two step sisters, Stephanie (information architect) and Victoria (teacher). Her husband Michael Beran is also an actor and they live in Auckland with their daughter, Olive. From 1995 to 2000 she appeared as Nurse Caroline Buxton in \"Shortland Street\". Other roles include \"\", \"Crash Palace\", \"Out of the Blue\", \"Seven Periods with Mr Gormsby\", \"The Lost Children\", \"Black Sheep\" and \"Legend of the Seeker\". In 2010, she played the role of Callie Ross, the wife of the main character, in \"This Is Not My Life\". Her next major role followed in 2011–2014, as Dr Catherine Duvall on the TVNZ drama \"Nothing Trivial\". She starred 2014 in the drama thriller series The Returned as Claire Winship."
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[
"no"
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Where did the performer of song A Heart Full Of Love (For A Handful Of Kisses) die?
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A Heart Full of Love (For a Handful of Kisses) "A Heart Full of Love (For a Handful of Kisses)" is a 1948 single by Eddy Arnold. Written by Arnold, Steve Nelson and Ray Soehnel, the song was Arnold's eighth number one, where it spent one week at the top of the Best Seller lists. The b-side of "A Heart Full of Love (For a Handful of Kisses)", is a song titled, "Then I Turned and Slowly Walked Away" hit number four on the Folk Best Seller lists.
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[
"Vince Courtney Vince Courtney was an Australian songwriter, entertainer, singer and radio personality during the vaudeville era. Born in Newcastle, New South Wales in 1887. He was prominent in the early twentieth century. Although it is unusual for an Australian artist, Courtney was regarded as universally published and a household word from his gramophone recordings and radio broadcasts He often performed with his wife, Eva. For several years he was a key member of impersonator revue \"Stiffy and Mo\", with fellow vaudeville personality Roy Rene. He contributed songs to pantomime \"The Bunyip\" (1916). Many of his songs were written for other leading variety performers. On 17th August 1951 he collapsed in a Dubbo hotel lobby and died suddenly. He is buried in Randwick, New South Wales.",
"Kiss Serious Kiss Serious is the second album from singer Chico DeBarge. It was the last album released before his drug arrest with oldest brother Bobby DeBarge of Switch fame. After the album's release, Bobby DeBarge died of AIDS in 1995.",
"Jean Adebambo Jean Adebambo (1 July 1962 – 15 January 2009) was a British singer, best known for songs in the lovers rock genre. It is believed she died by suicide. Jean Adebambo was born in Islington, London, to a Montserratian mother and a Nigerian father. Her entry into the music business was by chance; She was invited to do a cover version of two records entitled \"Again\" and \"Reunited\" by Ital Records in the early 1980s, while she was studying to be a nurse. She eventually met the Jamaican producer Leonard Chin, for whom she recorded the single \"Paradise\", and had a successful solo career, mainly recording for her own Ade J label. A string of hits followed such as the singles \"Reaching For A Goal\", \"Hardships of Life\" and \"Pipe Dreams\". Despite all the success, Adebambo quit the music industry and went back into the medical profession and became a health visitor in Bermondsey. A successful lovers rock concert was held in 2008 at the Brixton Academy, where Adebambo was persuaded to perform and restart her music career; however, she was found dead on 15 January 2009, aged 46. A tribute concert was held on at Hackney Empire on Sunday 15 March 2009, with the aim of raising funds to help raise her two daughters.",
"Ben Ryan (composer) Bennett A. \"Ben\" Ryan (March 30, 1892 – July 5, 1968) was an American songwriter who wrote the music and lyrics to the popular song \"(The Gang that Sang) Heart of My Heart\". He also wrote or co-wrote many other popular songs including \"Inka Dinka Doo\", \"M-I-S-S-I-S-S-I-P-P-I\", \"No Nothing\", \"The Thrill of a New Romance\", \"When Frances Dances with Me\", and \"When I Send You a Picture of Berlin\". Born in Kansas City, Missouri, Ryan was also a vaudeville performer, film actor and screen writer. Between 1914–1925, he teamed with Harriet Lee as the \"Ryan & Lee\" duo's comedy and singing-and-dancing vaudeville acts, including the hit \"Won and One is Two\". Following a lengthy illness, on July 5, 1968, he died at his home in Leonia, New Jersey.",
"Regina Carrol Regina Carrol (May 2, 1943 – November 4, 1992) was an American performer, born as Regina Carol Gelfan, mostly remembered for her roles in films directed by her husband, Al Adamson. After several stage roles, she entered film through a family friend, Steve Cochran who gave her a small role as a beatnik in \"The Beat Generation\" (1959). She met Al Adamson in a coffee shop in 1968 that led her to appear in several of his films. She died of cancer in St. George, Utah, on November 4, 1992. \"Brain of Blood\" was featured on an installment of \"Cinematic Titanic\" in 2008 under the title \"The Oozing Skull\".",
" Gurney's \"Strawberry Fields\", and Robert Beaser and Terrence McNally's \"The Food of Love\"). Since the early 1980s she was a regular guest artist with opera companies throughout the United States, including the Dallas Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, the Houston Grand Opera, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the Metropolitan Opera, the Opera Theater of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Opera, the Santa Fe Opera, Seattle Opera, and the Washington National Opera. She appeared on the international stage at La Scala, the Théâtre du Châtelet, and the Glyndebourne Festival. She died in the Pittsburgh neighborhood of Oakland from complications of a heart tumor, which had been diagnosed a dozen years earlier. She was 61 years old.",
"Steve Conway (singer) Steve Conway (born Walter James Groom; 24 October 1920 – 19 April 1952) was a British singer who rose to fame in the post-war era. Known for romantic ballads, he made dozens of recordings for EMI's Columbia label, appeared regularly on BBC Radio and toured the UK, before his career was interrupted by his untimely death at the age of 31 from a heart condition. He has been described as \"Britain's first post-war male heart-throb, a masculine equivalent of Vera Lynn in his sincerity and clear diction.\" Conway was born in Bethnal Green, then part of the Metropolitan Borough of Bethnal Green in east London, in 1920, and named Walter James Groom; he was known as Jimmy to friends and relatives. The eldest son of five children born to a labourer, Groom's family were poor, and their annual holiday was going hop picking in Kent every summer. The family experienced loss whilst Groom was still young: his twin brothers did not survive infancy, while his sister died at the age of five from meningitis. Groom himself suffered with rheumatic fever when he was five years old. Upon leaving school aged 14, Groom undertook poorly-paid manual work, initially making deliveries on a tricycle for an embroidery firm. He then worked at a shoe factory as a machinist, where his habit of singing on the shop floor made him unpopular with the foreman. Following an argument over this, Groom was sacked when he punched the foreman. Groom also worked as a porter at Billingsgate Fish Market. Whilst still a teenager, a turning point in Groom's life came when he met Lilian Butcher, a local East End girl who worked in a textile factory near where he was living. It has been said that Butcher \"was the woman who inspired profound devotion in him and infused his singing with such romantic power.\" During World War II, Butcher worked in a munitions factory; however, when Groom attempted to enlist in the Royal Navy, he was declared unfit for service, owing to a heart condition which had developed from his earlier rheumatic fever, and damaged his coronary valves. He was not told to seek treatment, and continued working. Groom had always enjoyed singing, but never sang in a school or church choir, and received no formal musical training.",
"Heart Full of Love (song) \"Heart Full of Love\" is a song written by Kostas, and recorded by American country music artist Holly Dunn. It was released in January 1991 as the second single and title track from the album \"Heart Full of Love\". The song reached #19 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.",
"Rosemary Clooney discography Singer Rosemary Clooney (May 23, 1928 – June 29, 2002) is known for many songs, including \"Come On-a My House\", \"Botch-a-Me\", \"Mambo Italiano\", \"Tenderly\", \"Half as Much\", \"Hey There\" and \"This Ole House\". This is a partial discography.",
"Vic Taylor Vic Taylor (1947 – June 25, 2003) was a Jamaican singer who was in well known Jamaican groups, Skatalites and Byron Lee & the Dragonaires. He died in 2003. Taylor was once a member of The Skatalites and then later on in the 1970s and 1980s, the front man of Byron Lee & the Dragonaires. He was well known and loved on the Jamaican music scene. During his career he had some hits that included \"For Your Precious Love\" and \"Heartaches\" etc. He moved to the US in the early Nineties, where he regularly sang on the cabaret and club scene, recently switching from Reggae and R&B to Gospel, having completed work on a religious album shortly before his passing. According to Family sources, Taylor had been feeling unwell for a couple of weeks and had complained of having chest pains. He was hospitalised for 9 days and having suffered breathing problems, he was placed on a respirator. he died on Monday 23 June 2003. His daughter Vanessa gave his age as 56."
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[
"Nashville"
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Are both bands, The Movement (dance band) and Blue Rodeo, from the same country?
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Blue Rodeo Blue Rodeo is a Canadian country rock band formed in 1984 in Toronto, Ontario. They have released 16 full-length studio albums, four live recordings, one greatest hits album, and two video/DVDs, along with multiple solo albums, side projects, and collaborations. High school friends Jim Cuddy and Greg Keelor began playing music professionally together after completing university. They put together several bands without commercial success in the late 1970s, releasing a single as Hi-Fi's in 1980. Cuddy and Keelor moved to New York City in the early 1980s to further their music careers. There they met keyboardist and fellow Canadian Bob Wiseman, who was at that time working as a producer. Upon returning to Toronto in the summer of 1984, the trio decided to form a band. The name "Blue Rodeo" had already been chosen for the new group when they met former David Wilcox drummer Cleave Anderson and asked him to join. Anderson in turn recommended his former bandmate in The Sharks, bassist Bazil Donovan, and the new band's lineup was essentially set. In 1985 Blue Rodeo played their first show together at The Rivoli in Toronto; one week later, they performed at Handsome Ned's "Honky Tonk Heart". The band quickly earned a following in Toronto and was subsequently signed to Canadian independent record label Risque Disque. They entered the studio in 1986 with Rush producer Terry Brown and recorded several songs that would comprise Blue Rodeo's debut album, "Outskirts". Released in March, 1987, "Outskirts" met with moderate success in Canada, until "Try" was released as a single in October of that year. The single was an immediate hit, going to number one on the "RPM Country Tracks" chart and number six on the "RPM Top Singles" chart, establishing Blue Rodeo as one of Canada's top new bands and carrying "Outskirts" to 4× Platinum status in sales. The music video for the single featured Keelor's then-girlfriend Michelle McAdorey, who soon had success with her own band, Crash Vegas. In 1992, the band's song "After the Rain", written by Cuddy and Keelor, was the most-performed song in Canada. By 1999 the band had sold more than two million albums in Canada. Cuddy, Keelor, Donovan and Cripps have all released solo albums.
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[
"Movement (band) Movement (stylised as MOVEMENT) are an Australian minimal soul trio, blending R&B and ambient music. They consist of Lewis Wade on vocals and keyboards, and Jesse James Ward on bass guitar, synthesisers and vocals. Their self-titled debut extended play was released in May 2014 via Modular Recordings. Movement were formed in Sydney in 2011. Their music is described as \"minimal soul,\" as well as \"psychedelic\" and \"body music.\" The songs have elements of R&B, ambient, soul and pop music. They were signed to Modular Recordings in May 2013 ahead of the label issuing their debut single, \"Feel Real\". Their second single, \"Us\", was named a Best New Track on \"Pitchfork\" in September, as was the third single, \"Like Lust\", in March 2014. That single reached No. 16 on the ARIA Hitseekers Singles Chart. The music video for a fourth single, \"Ivory\" (April), was directed by Fleur & Manu. Movement's debut self-titled four-track EP was released on 6 May 2014 via Modular Recordings, with additional production and mixing from Illangelo. Ryan Burleson of \"Paste\" described how, \"[their] songs interact with the body more than the mind, though in the right settings—driving in the desert at sunset, say, or getting high at night on the beach—they're ripe for meditation. Otherwise the goal here seems fairly obvious: To generate a soundtrack for the bedroom, the moments leading up to the bedroom, and the moments just beyond... the trio hits all its marks, and listeners would border on robotic not to feel at least a slight bit of provocation in these songs.\" Movement toured Australia in May 2014 and then Europe and the United States in mid-year. They have opened for various artist including Banks on her North American tour in August 2014, Darkside on their tour of Australia, and for Solange. According to AllMusic's Paul Simpson, \"[their] sound combined seductive, R&B-inspired vocals with downtempo dance beats and dark atmospheres.\" \"MTV\"s Lisa Hamilton caught their gig in September 2014 at Newtown Social Club, \"These are bedroom tracks for Millenials; between the sheets of a digital age where lust is clicked, licked and fleeting...",
"The Things We Left Behind The Things We Left Behind is the twelfth studio album released by Canadian country rock band Blue Rodeo, released on November 10, 2009. It is their first studio double album. The album was a longlisted nominee for the 2010 Polaris Music Prize. \"The Things We Left Behind\" is available as two CD's, two 180 gram LP's (which also included both CD's), and as a digital download.",
"Beat Rodeo Beat Rodeo (also known as The Beat Rodeo) was a country rock band from New York City during the 1980s. Following the breakup of the Minneapolis-based Suicide Commandos (in which he played bass), Steve Almaas moved to New York, turned to guitar and formed The Crackers; the band's EP \"Sir Crackers!\" (1981) indicates the rough-hewn melodic rock direction Almaas would later pursue. After working with The Bongos, Almaas, along with Bongos' leader Richard Barone, headed to North Carolina to visit Mitch Easter at his Drive-In Studio; the three of them put together the four-track \"Beat Rodeo\" EP, credited to Almaas and released in 1982 on Easter's Coyote Records label. (One of the tracks, \"What's the Matter\", later appeared on a compilation on the Shake Some Action label in 2003.) Almaas almost immediately formed a quartet named for the EP, but not including Easter or Barone; the single \"What's The Matter\" b/w \"Mimi\" was issued by Coyote in 1983 (under the name \"The\" Beat Rodeo). The following year, Zensor Records in Germany issued the band's first LP, \"Staying Out Late With the Beat Rodeo\", produced by Don Dixon, with two tracks helmed by Richard Gottehrer. The record, which shows a country bent implicit in its name (country-ish guitar sound, with a dash of fiddle), and integrates it into the already established pop-rock context. (A single, \"She's More\" b/w \"Mistake\" was also released; the group performed \"She's More\" on German television.) IRS Records signed the quartet and re-issued the album in 1985, shortening the band's name to simply \"Beat Rodeo\". In 1986, Beat Rodeo released their second album, \"Home in the Heart of the Beat\", produced by Scott Litt; the LP produced two singles: \"Everything I'm Not\" b/w \"It Could Happen Here\" (\"Everything\" also appeared on a 12\" promo disc with \"I'm Not Afraid (Doesn't Matter to Me)\" on the flip); and \"New Love\" b/w \"Just Friends\" (with videos made for both sides of the single; \"Just Friends\" had been previously released on \"Staying Out Late\".",
"Movement Movement may refer to:",
"Movements (band) Movements are a post-hardcore band from Rancho Santa Margarita, California, formed in 2015. The band was signed to a record contract with Fearless Records after playing just one show in 2015. They have released an EP, \"Outgrown Things\" (2016), and two albums, \"Feel Something\" (2017) and \"No Good Left to Give\" (2020). \"Feel Something\" peaked at 190 on the \"Billboard\" 200 chart. Influenced by bands such as Title Fight, Oceana, Thrice and Balance and Composure, Guitarist Brett Chiodo and Vocalist Patrick Miranda got together to finally create a band after jamming together casually for years. Movements was formed in January 2015 by guitarist Brett Chiodo and Patrick Miranda. Brett Chiodo recruited drummer Spencer York, and Patrick Miranda, having been in a band together before, recruited bassist Austin Cressey. They self-released their first single, \"Protection\" on January 31, 2015. Guitarist Brett Chiodo wrote the lyrics and music for “Protection” as well as created the band name. Vocalist Patrick Miranda and Brett Chiodo knew it was meant to be as soon as Patrick sang his melodies over the music for the first time. The band played their first show opening for Have Mercy in March 2015. A second single, \"Buried\" was released on March 17. A third single, \"Scripted\" was released on April 14. After only one local gig, the band signed a three record deal with Fearless Records in August 2015. The band chose Fearless over Hopeless Records. After recording their first EP, Outgrown Things, guitarist Brett Chiodo left the band in January 2016. Chiodo wrote all the demo songs as well as the Outgrown Things EP with the band He was replaced by guitarist Ira George, who did not contribute to the writing or recording of Outgrown Things. Their debut EP, produced by Will Yip, \"Outgrown Things\" was released on March 11, 2016. The album reached 42 on the Indie charts. That month, the band toured with Real Friends on a tour where tickets were only $5 and the bands played in unconventional places such as bowling alleys and skateparks.",
"The Motions (band) The Motions were a Dutch band from The Hague founded in 1964 and active until 1970. The lead singer was Rudy Bennett, with Robbie van Leeuwen on guitar, Henk Smitskamp on bass guitar, and Sieb Warner on drums. They were the first Nederbeat band to achieve chart success. Their single \"Wasted Words\" was their first major hit in the Netherlands in 1965. Other songs include \"Why Don't You Take It\", \"There's No Place to Hide\", \"Every Step I Take\" and \"It's The Same Old Song\". Guitar player Robbie van Leeuwen went on to achieve international success as a founder of Shocking Blue, with their song \"Venus\" in particular. Rudy Bennett also released successful records. He had solo hit with in 1967 with \"How Can We Hang On to a Dream\", another charted song with Galaxy-Lin in he mid-1970s, and then further success as the duo Bennet & Bee later in the early 1980s.",
"The Nation Blue The Nation Blue is a rock band formed in Tasmania and based in Melbourne, Victoria, noted for their intense live performances and bleak subject matter. They have toured nationally in Australia and internationally in Brazil, America and Japan and have supported Helmet and Foo Fighters. In the third song of their first set in support of the Foo Fighters, bass player, Matt Weston, dislocated his knee but saw out the remainder of the set while lying painfully on the stage floor. At the fourth annual AIR Awards, held on 22 November 2009, The Nation Blue won the 'Best Independent Hard Rock/Punk Album' award for \"Rising Waters\". The Australian Independent Record Awards (commonly known informally as AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.",
"The Movement (Inspectah Deck album) The Movement is the second solo studio album by American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member Inspectah Deck. It was released on June 10, 2003 through Koch Records. Production was handled by Phantom of the Beats, Ayatollah, Arabian Knight and Falling Down, with Inspectah Deck serving as executive producer and Saadiq Busby as associate executive producer. It features guest appearances from Killa Sin, Kool G Rap, Mojehan and Streetlife. The album peaked at number 137 on the \"Billboard\" 200 and number 29 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in the United States. A departure from \"Uncontrolled Substance\"'s darker, soul-inspired sound, \"The Movement\" is more upbeat and expressive. According to Inspectah Deck, \"\"Uncontrolled Substance\" was just me as an ill lyricist wanting to put an album out. I just wanted to be heard. \"The Movement\" is like is me behind the scenes, behind everything. I'm doing … everything. All the credits got Inspectah Deck on it this time. I was able to put my soul into it\".",
"Head over Heels (Blue Rodeo song) \"Head Over Heels\" is a song recorded by Canadian country rock group Blue Rodeo. It was released in 1995 as the sixth single from their fifth studio album, \"Five Days in July\". It peaked at number 4 on the \"RPM\" Country Tracks chart and number 16 on the \"RPM\" Adult Contemporary Tracks chart in May 1995. It was reached the top 40 on the \"RPM\" Top Singles chart.",
"Movement (The Gossip album) Movement is the second studio album by American indie rock band Gossip, it was released on May 6, 2003."
] |
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[
"no"
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Which film has the director died later, Old Hutch or Ruby Gentry?
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Old Hutch Old Hutch is a 1936 American romantic comedy film directed by J. Walter Ruben and starring Wallace Beery as a man who finds $100,000 in the depths of the Depression. It is a remake of the 1920 Will Rogers film "Honest Hutch."
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[
"Ruby (Ruby Gentry theme) \"Ruby\" is the 1952 theme song for the film \"Ruby Gentry\" starring Jennifer Jones, written by Mitchell Parish and Heinz Roemheld. There were six chartered versions of the song in 1953. The theme enjoyed much popularity in orchestral recordings by Les Baxter, with harmonica solo by Danny Welton., Victor Young And His Singing Strings with George Fields on harmonica (Columbia DO-70040, Australia), Richard Hayman And His Orchestra with Richard Hayman on harmonica, and Jerry Murad and the Harmonicats. It has subsequently become a jazz and pop standard, both as an instrumental and with lyrics by Mitchell Parish:",
"Treasure of Ruby Hills Treasure of Ruby Hills is a 1955 American black-and-white Western film directed by Frank McDonald and starring Zachary Scott, Carole Mathews, Barton MacLane, Dick Foran, and Lola Albright. The film is based on the story \"The Rider of the Ruby Hills\" by Louis L'Amour. He wrote the story under the pen-name Jim Mayo; the story was later expanded as the novel \"Where the Long Grass Blows\" in 1976. The film is set in 1877 in Arlington. In the government-owned Ruby Hills Valley all the small landowners and ranchers are dispossessed of their property by two wealthy breeders, Chalk Reynolds and Walt Payne, who continue to wage war for total control of the area. Hills. Their henchmen do not hesitate to kill others to establish the supremacy of their leaders. Their war is turned upside down by the arrival of Ross Hayne, the son of a famous outlaw, who legally acquired part of the area with the only source of water capable of supplying the valley. When Hayne's partner is shot by Reynolds' henchman, Hayne goes to Ruby Hills for revenge. He discovers that a third man, Alan Doran, intends to take control of the place after the death of the two clans who are supposed to destroy each other. Hayne becomes involved in a deadly fight for land and water.",
"My Old Kentucky Home (1922 film) My Old Kentucky Home is a lost 1922 American silent drama film directed by Ray C. Smallwood and starring Monte Blue, Julia Swayne Gordon, and Frank Currier. As described in a film magazine, Richard Goodloe (Blue), son of a proud Southern widow (Gordon), has been released from prison where he served two years after being railroaded by another crook, and returns to his home in Kentucky. En route he meets his former sweetheart Virginia Sanders (Holmquist). His mother has entered their horse Dixie in the derby and the family fortune is at stake. In one of the fastest races ever run, Dixie wins. Mrs. Goodloe accepts the hand of Colonel Sanders (Currier), and, after \"Con\" Arnold (Carewe) is exposed as a criminal, Virginia declares her love for Richard.",
"In Old Colorado In Old Colorado is a 1941 American Western film directed by Howard Bretherton and written by J. Benton Cheney, Russell Hayden and Norton S. Parker. The film stars William Boyd, Russell Hayden, Andy Clyde, Margaret Hayes, Morris Ankrum, Sarah Padden and Cliff Nazarro. The film was released on March 14, 1941, by Paramount Pictures.",
"The Old Homestead (1915 film) The Old Homestead is a surviving 1915 American comedy silent film directed by James Kirkwood, Sr. and written by Hugh Ford and Denman Thompson. The film stars Frank Losee, Creighton Hale, Denman Maley, Louise Huff, Mrs. Corbett and Horace Newman. The film was released on December 26, 1915, by Paramount Pictures. The movie is based on the popular 19th-century play of the same name by Denman Thompson. The play revolved around the character Joshua Whitcomb, a folksy New England farmer created and often portrayed on the stage by Thompson. In this film, however, the character is called Josiah Whitcomb.",
"An Old Fashioned Boy An Old Fashioned Boy is a surviving 1920 American silent comedy romance film directed by Jerome Storm and starring Charles Ray. Famous Players-Lasky produced along with producer Thomas Ince. It was released by Paramount Pictures. As described in a film magazine, David Warrington (Ray) is an old fashioned boy with old fashioned ideas regarding marriage, living in a real home, babies, and the like. He is in love with Betty Graves (Shannon), a young woman who believes in the modern phases of life. After several heartaches and numerous comical situations, things shape themselves out so that Betty finds herself in her sweetheart's arms on the way to the minister for the wedding, having been convinced that the old fashioned way is the best after all. Prints exist at the Library of Congress, Gosfilmofond, UCLA Film and Television Archive.",
"Ray Hutchison Ray Hutchison may refer to:",
"Old Faithful (film) Old Faithful is a 1935 British drama film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring Horace Hodges, Glennis Lorimer and Bruce Lester. The screenplay concerns an elderly taxi driver who refuses to give up his old horse, even though his business is being taken by younger drivers using modern cars. His anguish is increased when his daughter plans to marry one of the younger taxi drivers. \"Allmovie\" called it a \"charming comedy\"; and \"TV Guide\" wrote, \"Though dated, this retains some moments of charm, thanks to Hodges' wonderful characterization.\"",
"Ruby Hill Ruby Hill may refer to:",
"Hills of Old Wyoming Hills of Old Wyoming is a 1937 American Western film directed by Nate Watt and written by Maurice Geraghty, the 10th film of the 66 Hopalong Cassidy movies. The film stars William Boyd, George \"Gabby\" Hayes, Morris Ankrum, Russell Hayden, Gail Sheridan, John Beach and Clara Kimball Young, Russell Hayden makes his first (of 27 consecutive) appearances. The film was released on April 16, 1937, by Paramount Pictures. An evil deputy is using Indian mixed-blood individuals to rustle cattle. This causes trouble between the cattlemen and the Indians. Hoppy, Windy and Lucky see that justice is served. Songs abound."
] |
[] |
[
"Ruby Gentry"
] |
Where did the director of film Too Outrageous! die?
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Too Outrageous! Too Outrageous! is a 1987 Canadian comedy film directed and written by Richard Benner and starring Craig Russell as Robin Turner, a drag queen. It is based on a story by Margaret Gibson. A sequel to the 1977 film "Outrageous!", "Too Outrageous!" is about the further adventures of Robin Turner, a gay hairdresser-turned-drag queen nightclub performer.
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[
"Raoul Lévy Raoul Levy (14 April 1922 – 31 December 1966) was a French film producer, writer and director best known for a series of movies he made starring Brigitte Bardot. He was born in Antwerp. He committed suicide after losing most of his fortune making a film about the life of Marco Polo. He shot himself in the chest outside the front door of a female friend's house in St Tropez. The female friend was Isabelle Pons, who had recently ended a two-year affair with Levy. Levy was survived by a wife and fifteen-year-old son.",
"Del Tenney Delbert \"Del\" Tenney (July 27, 1930 – February 21, 2013) was an American actor, film director, screenwriter and film producer. Starting out as an actor he appeared in some Off-Broadway plays and also performed in the Broadway premiere of Terence Rattigan's play \"Ross\". He then established a legacy in film with several low-budget horror/exploitation films in the 1960s, including \"The Horror of Party Beach\" (1964). Based in Connecticut, Tenney's other films include \"Psychomania\" (a.k.a. \"Violent Midnight\"), \"The Curse of the Living Corpse\", and \"I Eat Your Skin\". Tenney died on February 21, 2013, at his home in Jupiter, Florida. He was 82. Tenney married stage and film actress Margot Hartman. They remained married until his death.",
" He played a film director in Steven Seagal's \"On Deadly Ground\". He was a faculty member at the Master of Professional Writing Program at the University of Southern California. In 2000 he was a member of the jury at the 22nd Moscow International Film Festival. In fall 2002, spring 2003, fall 2004, and spring 2004, Kershner served as a Visiting Professor and Research Associate at the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH) at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he also provided cinematography training. He and the Founding Director Martha Nell Smith remained close and he served as her advisor until the end of his life. Kershner died on November 27, 2010, at his home in Los Angeles after a -year battle with lung cancer. Kershner had been working on photographic projects before his death. He was survived by two sons, David and Dana.",
"Tulsi Ramsay Tulsi Ramsay (29 July 1944 – 13 December 2018) was an Indian film director. He was the son of F. U. Ramsay and was one of the famous Seven Ramsay Brothers. The other six are Kumar Ramsay, Shyam Ramsay, Keshu Ramsay, Arjun Ramsay, Gangu Ramsay and Kiran Ramsay. Tulsi Ramsay directed several movies in the Horror genre during the 80's and 90's. Movies such as Hotel, Purana Mandir, Tahkhana, Veerana, Bandh Darwaza have acquired a cult following. He has also directed the \"Zee Horror Show\" TV series in 1993. The memories of most of the episodes of this TV series are still afresh in the hearts of horror enthusiasts in India. He ran a production company, Tulsi Ramsay Production located at Andheri in Mumbai. Ramsay died on 14 December, 2018 in a city hospital in Mumbai after complaining of chest pains.",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau (director) Jean-Jacques Rousseau (December 16, 1946 – November 5, 2014) was a Belgian absurdist independent film director. He was born in Souvret, Belgium (Courcelles) and died in Montigny-le-Tilleul. He shot his films with very small budgets (€2000 to 2500 per film) and used unknown or non-professional actors. He called himself \"the director of the absurd\" and always fiercely protected his anonymity by masking his face during his public appearances. He shot over 50 films making him one of Belgium's most prolific film directors. His life was supposed to be the subject of a Yann Moix film, called \"Palme d'or\", starring Benoît Poelvoorde. The project was not filmed. Moix did make, without Poelvoorde, the disastrous '. Frédéric Sojcher's film ', also known as \"Born to Film\", was selected and shown at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004, is dedicated to Rousseau's work as well as Max Naveaux's and Jacques Hardy's. It stars the actors Bouli Lanners and Benoît Poelvoorde. Rousseau's first few films were fairly conventional examples of the fantasy genre. However, some of them won regional awards in the 1970s (people's choice, best screenplay). A semi-permanent lack of financial resources prevented him from making technically accomplished films. However, he financed, edited, directed and acted in most of them. He was also known for carrying a gun on set and sometimes firing it to get the actors' attention. Having a fertile imagination fueled by esoteric tastes in books, his films shunned the mainstream more and more, thus becoming marginalized. He never received subsidies to finance his films. Patrick Moriau, a Belgian politician, stated once that \"\"If one asked me to allocate part of the Walloon Community's finances to the Committee for Film Selection, the money would undoubtedly never go into Rousseau's pockets. He may be a kind man, but his films are frankly wild and scare people.\"\" On the evening of July 15, 2014 after an altercation outside a café between two men, he was run over by a car driven by one of the men and remained in a coma until his death later that year on November 5.",
"Rafael Romero Marchent Rafael Romero Marchent (3 May 1926 – 13 February 2020) was a Spanish director, screenwriter and actor. Born in Madrid, the son of the author Joaquín Romero Marchent Gómez de Avellaneda, he started his career as an actor, mainly cast in character roles. In 1959 he became assistant director, and in 1965 he made his directorial debut with \"Hands of a Gunfighter\". Specialized in the Spaghetti Western genre, from the late 1970s he was also active on television. His brother Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent was also a director and screenwriter. In the 2000s he taught film and interpretation classes. He was awarded in 1947 by the Medalla del Círculo de Escritores Cinematográficos for his role in the film \"La mies es mucha\". He married Maruja Tamayo. He died on 13 February 2020 at the age of 93.",
"Stuart Gordon Stuart Alan Gordon (August 11, 1947 – March 24, 2020) was an American filmmaker, theatre director, screenwriter, and playwright. Initially recognized for his provocative and frequently controversial work in experimental theatre, Gordon is perhaps more widely known for work in film. Most of Gordon's cinematic output was in the horror genre, though he also ventured into science fiction and film noir. Born in Chicago, Gordon became known for experimental and sometimes controversial live theater at the University of Wisconsin in the late 1960s. Moving back to Chicago, he founded and led the Organic Theater Company. In the early 1980s, Gordon went to California to pursue movie making. Like his friend and fellow filmmaker Brian Yuzna, Gordon was a fan of H. P. Lovecraft and adapted several of the author's stories for the screen, including \"Re-Animator\", \"From Beyond\", and \"Dagon\", as well as the \"Masters of Horror\" episode \"Dreams in the Witch-House\". He turned to the work of Edgar Allan Poe on two occasions, directing \"The Pit and the Pendulum\" in 1991 and \"The Black Cat\" for the \"Masters of Horror\" series in 2007. Several of his films have gone on to become cult classics. Stuart Alan Gordon was born on August 11, 1947 in Chicago, Illinois, the son of Rosalie (Sabath), a high school English teacher, and Bernard Gordon, a cosmetics factory supervisor. After graduating from Lane Technical High School, Gordon worked as a commercial artist apprentice prior to enrolling at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Unable to get into the film classes, he enrolled in an acting class and ended up majoring in theater. During this time, he founded his first theatre company, Screw Theater. In late March 1968, Gordon produced \"The Game Show\" on the Play Circle stage of the University of Wisconsin–Madison's Wisconsin Union Theater. The play, intended to be an attack on apathy, locked the audience in the theater and seemingly humiliated, beat and raped them (audience plants were used). Every performance ended with the audience rioting and stopping the show. Later that year, with his wife Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, he relocated to Chicago and founded the Organic Theater Company, for which Gordon also served as artistic director.",
"H. Bruce Humberstone H. Bruce \"Lucky\" Humberstone (November 18, 1901 – October 11, 1984) was an American film director. He was previously a movie actor (as a child), a script clerk, and an assistant director, working with directors such as King Vidor, Edmund Goulding and Allan Dwan. Humberstone was born in Buffalo, New York, and attended Miami Military Academy in Miami, Florida. One of 28 founders of the Directors Guild of America, Humberstone worked on several silent movie films for 20th Century Fox. Humberstone did not specialize; he worked on comedies, dramas, and melodramas. Humberstone is best known today for the seminal film noir \"I Wake Up Screaming\" (1941) and his work on some of the Charlie Chan films. In the 1950s, Humberstone worked mostly on TV. He retired in 1966. Humberstone has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Humberstone died of pneumonia in Woodland Hills, California, on October 11, 1984, aged 82, and was buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.",
"Larry Kent (filmmaker) Laurence Lionel \"Larry\" Kent (born May 16, 1937, in Johannesburg, South Africa) is a Canadian filmmaker. Larry Kent emigrated from South Africa to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 1957 and immersed himself in the world of theatre. A devout film buff and scholar, Kent made the transition from the stage to screen in the early 60's. Kent wrote and directed the existential Canadian indie, post-beatnik, pre-hippie classic \"The Bitter Ash\" in 1962 and tirelessly toured the film despite the controversy it garnered nationwide. Filled with profanity and brief nudity, the picture was produced on a shoestring, shot silent with audio dubbed in later and boasted a brilliant, relentless jazz music score. His follow-up film, \"Sweet Substitute\" (1964) made money in the United States, a first for any Canadian independent picture. Together with his third picture, the proto-feminist film \"When Tomorrow Dies\", these three movies comprise Kent's \"Vancouver Trilogy\". Kent moved to Montreal in the late 1960s where he began making films that exemplified the wild, drug informed spirit of the youth driven counterculture. His 1967 film \"High\" premiered at the Montreal Film Festival the same year as the groundbreaking Arthur Penn film \"Bonnie and Clyde\". That film's star, Warren Beatty, was one of High's strongest supporters, along with legendary German filmmaker Fritz Lang, who headed the jury that year. During the 1970s and throughout the 80's, Kent continued to explore various aspects of the human condition in his work. Though he slowed down in the 90's somewhat, he made a stunning return to form in 2005 with what is perhaps his finest effort, \"The Hamster Cage\", a demented black comedy/psychodrama that is as funny as it is disturbing. \"The Hamster Cage\" won the jury prize at the 2005 Austin Fantastic Fest. In 2007, Kent completed post-production work on \"Hastings Street\", a 20-minute Vancouver drama principally filmed in 1962. In 2009, Kent completed work on another, as yet untitled film and has plans for several more in the near future. He is the mentor to director Jared Pelletier.",
" His best-remembered films are \"Two-Way Stretch\" (1960), starring Peter Sellers, and \"You Must Be Joking\" (1965), directed by Michael Winner. His success writing for the television series \"The Adventures of Robin Hood\" and the 1960 film \"Sword of Sherwood Forest\" enabled him to buy an Edwardian house in Bovingdon, Hertfordshire where he spent the rest of his life, first with his wife, Peggy until her she died in 1995 and then later with the Canadian film producer Daisy de Bellefeuille, whom he nursed through a long illness until her death in 2006. Hackney shared a BAFTA for Best Screenplay of 1959 for \"I'm All Right Jack\". Alan Hackney died on 15 May 2009, aged 85. He was survived by his six children."
] |
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[
"Toronto"
] |
Do both films Betrayal From The East and The Magnificent Beast have the directors that share the same nationality?
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Beast of the East Beast of the East may refer to:
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[
"The Beautiful Beast The Beautiful Beast () is a Canadian drama film, directed by Karim Hussain and released in 2006. An adaptation of Marie-Claire Blais's 1959 novel \"Mad Shadows (La Belle bête)\", the film centres on a dysfunctional family headed by single mother Louise (Carole Laure), who has an abusive relationship with her children Patrice (Marc-André Grondin) and Isabelle-Marie (Caroline Dhavernas). The cast also includes David La Haye, Sébastien Huberdeau, Ludivine Reding, Normand Lévesque, Nicolas Girard Deltruc and Richard Tassé. The film premiered on October 11, 2006 at the Sitges Film Festival, before going into general release in Quebec on November 3. Patrick Watson and Dhavernas received a Genie Award nomination for Best Original Song at the 27th Genie Awards in 2007, for the song \"Trace-moi\".",
"Betrayal (1974 film) Betrayal is a 1974 ABC Movie of the Week directed by Gordon Hessler and starring Amanda Blake and Tisha Sterling, adapted from the novel \"Only Couples Need Apply\" by Doris Miles Disney. It first aired on December 3, 1974. An elderly widow, Helen Mercer, hires a young woman, Gretchen Addison, as her companion. Little does she suspect that the woman and her boyfriend are criminals, who plan to make her their next victim, killing her and stealing her money.",
"The Beast (1974 film) The Beast () is an Italian comedy directed by Sergio Corbucci and stars Gabriella Giorgelli, Michel Constantin and Giancarlo Giannini. The film premiered on 20 November 1974 in Paris and screened in West Germany on 14 February 1975 as Die Cleveren Zwei with an Warner-Columbia Filmverleih distribution.",
"The Shimmering Beast The Shimmering Beast () is a 1982 Canadian documentary film directed by Pierre Perrault, about a group of hunters who gather annually to hunt moose near Maniwaki, Quebec. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival.",
"Betrayal (1932 film) Betrayal is a 1932 British crime film directed by Reginald Fogwell and starring Stewart Rome, Marjorie Hume and Leslie Perrins. A woman attempts to save her husband from being hanged for a crime he didn't commit. It is based on a play \"No Crime of Passion\" by Hubert G. Griffith.",
"Magnificent Warriors Magnificent Warriors (, aka \"Dynamite Fighters\") is a 1987 Hong Kong martial arts action adventure film directed by David Chung, and starring Michelle Yeoh, Tung-shing Yee, Richard Ng Yiu-hon and Hwang Jang Lee. The Film Was set In location of The Western china and Tibet. On 21 May 2001, DVD was released in Hong Kong Legends at UK in Region 2. Five years later, The Michelle Yeoh Collection DVD were released on 9 January 2006 at 3 disc set including two films they were: Police Assassins and Wing Chun.",
"The Beast (1988 film) The Beast (also known as The Beast of War) is a 1988 American war film directed by Kevin Reynolds and written by William Mastrosimone, based on his play \"Nanawatai\". The film follows the crew of a Soviet T-64 tank who became lost during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The film has enjoyed a cult-favorite status in spite of its low box office statistics. In 1981 Afghanistan, a Soviet tank unit viciously attacks a Pashtun village harboring a group of mujahideen fighters. Following the assault, one of the tanks—commanded by ruthless commander Daskal (George Dzundza)—takes a wrong turn through a mountain pass and enters a blind valley. Taj (Steven Bauer) returns to discover the village destroyed, and his father and brother killed—the latter by having been crushed under Daskal's tank. As the new khan following his brother's death, Taj is spurred to seek revenge and leads a band of mujahideen fighters into the valley to pursue Daskal's tank (which they call 'The Beast'), counting on their captured RPG-7 anti-tank weapon to destroy it. Lost, isolated, and with their radio damaged in the village attack, the tank crew set out to find Kandahar Road and return to Soviet lines. While camping for the night, Afghan communist crewman Samad (Erick Avari) educates the reluctant tank driver, Konstantin Koverchenko (Jason Patric), about the Pashtun people's code of honour, \"Pashtunwali\"; particularly \"nanawatai\", which requires that an enemy is to be given sanctuary if he asks. En route, the crew suffer several setbacks and ambushes from Taj's band. Suspecting Samad to be a traitor, Daskal murders him in front of his men; Koverchenko threatens to report Daskal for the illegal killing. At a brief stop, Koverchenko reports that their tank is breaking down; Daskal accuses him of mutiny and orders gunner Kaminski (Don Harvey) and loader Golikov (Stephen Baldwin) to tie him to a rock, and leave him with a grenade behind his head as a booby-trap for the mujahideen. Wild dogs eventually attack Koverchenko, but he is saved when the grenade rolls off the rock and explodes, scaring them off.",
"Betrayer (film) Betrayer () is a 2020 Czech historical television film directed by Biser A. Arichtev. It stars Marián Labuda jr. as Emanuel Moravec. It premiered on 26 April 2020 in Czech Television with second part being released on 3 May 2020. First part was viewed by 813,000 people.",
"The Beast (2020 film) The Beast () is a 2020 Italian action thriller film directed by Ludovico Di Martino and starring Fabrizio Gifuni, Lino Musella and Monica Piseddu.",
"A Man Betrayed (1941 film) A Man Betrayed (UK title Citadel of Crime, TV title Wheel of Fortune) is a 1941 American film directed by John H. Auer and starring John Wayne. Lynn Hollister, a bucolic lawyer takes on big-city corruption. He sets out to prove that an above-suspicion politician Boss Thomas \"Tom\" Cameron is actually a crook. Hollister is in love with the politician's daughter, Sabra."
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[
"no"
] |
Who was born later, El Lebrijano or Hana Gregorová?
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Antonio de Lebrija Antonio de Lebrija may refer to:
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[
"Lebrija Lebrija () is a city and municipality of Spain located in the autonomous community of Andalusia, most specifically in the Province of Sevilla. It straddles the left bank of the Guadalquivir river, and the eastern edge of the marshes known as Las Marismas. According to a 2008 population census, it has 26,046 inhabitants, and has an area surface of 372 km, making it one of the biggest municipalities in the province. The nearest municipalities are El Cuervo and Las Cabezas de San Juan, in Seville and Trebujena and the city of Jerez de la Frontera in the province of Cádiz. The main productive activity is agriculture, with beet, cotton, wheat and various fruits its main products. Winemaking activities are also prominent with Manzanilla and other finos too. Lebrija is also known for its pottery and earthenware heritage, including \"búcaros\". The farmers of this area were the first to cultivate corn brought over from the Americas. There has been human presence in the area since the Bronze Age, although the founding of Lebrija, possibly did not take place till the Phoenicians arrival, who baptised the settlement as \"Lepriptza\", then to be renamed \"Nebrissa\", during Tartessian times. Originally, it was a port on the shores of the Lacus Ligustinus, a large inner lake surrounded by the Guadalquivir River and its tributaries and coastal sand bars to the South. The lake later filled with sediment, and gradually gave way to the current Guadalviquir marshy lowlands or, in Spanish, \"las Marismas\". Lebrija is also the \"Nabrissa\" or \"Nebrissa\", surnamed \"Veneria\", of the Romans; by Silius Italicus. According to local historian José Bellido, the word \"veneria\", (Latin: \"\"that which venerates (worships)\"\") makes reference to the mythical foundation of Lebrija by the god Dionysus (Bacchus): \"Where special veneration is given to Bacchus, there where the swift satyres and the menades, at night celebrate the mysteries of that god, with their heads covered up with a deer skin\".",
"Ana Margot Lemos Ana Margot Lemos (born April 24, 1986) is a female weightlifter from Colombia. She won a silver medal at the 2007 Pan American Games for her native South American country.",
"Francisco Lebeque Francisco Lebeque (born 3 April 1949) is a Cuban former wrestler who competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics and in the 1972 Summer Olympics.",
"Diego Gregori Diego Gregori (born 26 July 1995) is a Spanish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for CF Villanovense. Gregori started his senior career with CF Torre Levante. In 2015, he signed for Envigado in the Colombian Categoría Primera A, where he made 46 appearances and scored three goals. After that, he played for UD Ibiza, Jumilla, and CF Villanovense.",
"Dobrina Cristeva Dobrina Liubomirova Stoylova Anguelova known as Dobrina Cristeva (; ; Sofia, Bulgaria, October 9, 1968) is a Bulgarian-Mexican actress. She immigrated to Mexico in 1976, when she was 8 years old. She started her career as a dancer in 1981 and as an actress in 1988.",
"Gregoria Ferrer Gregoria Ferrer (born 4 June 1963) is a Spanish sprinter. She competed in the women's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 1992 Summer Olympics.",
"Gregorio Vicente Gregorio Vicente (born 22 April 1969) is a Spanish sprint canoer who competed from the late 1980s to the late 1990s. Competing in three Summer Olympics, he earned his best finish of fifth in the K-4 1000 m event at Atlanta in 1996.",
"Antonio F. Lera Antonio Fernandez Lera (born 1952 Madrid) is a Spanish writer, translator, journalist and publisher. In 1998 he formed the Magrinyana company, in which he has taken on the staging of his own texts: \"Plomo caliente\" [Hot Lead] (1998); \"Monos locos y otras crónicas\" [Mad Monkeys and Other Tales] (2000); \"Mátame, abrázame\" [Kill Me, Embrace Me] (2002); \"Las islas del tiempo\" [The Islands of Time] (2003) and \"Memoria del jardín\" [Memory of the Garden] (staged in 2009). His works include: \"Proyecto Van Gogh: Entre los paisajes\" [Van Gogh Project: Among Landscapes] (1989); Los hombres de piedra [The Stone Men] (1990); Muerte de Ayax [Death of Ajax] (1991) and Paisajes y Voz [Landscapes and Voice] (1992). He has also written \"Cuadros escritos\" [Written Paintings] (poems, 1983); \"Los ojos paralelos\" [Parallel Eyes] (1992); \"Las huellas del agua\" [The Traces of Water] (poems, 2003); \"Libro de alegrías\" [Book of Joys] and \"Teorías de animales\" [Theories of Animals] (poems, 2005).",
"Ana Lemos Ana Lemos may refer to:",
"Francisca Subirana Francisca \"Panchita\" Subirana Wolf (also y Lobo; 24 January 1900 – March 1981) was a Spanish tennis player. Subirana was born in Barcelona. She won the city's tennis tournament from 1916 to 1920 five times in a row. In 1920, she reached the final of the World Hard Court Championships which she lost to Dorothy Holman in straight sets. She was in the Spanish squad for the 1920 Summer Olympics at Antwerp but didn't play her first match against Winifred McNair. Around 1922, Subirana retired from tennis. In 1924, she married Ricardo Wolf (1887–1981), a German Jewish immigrant, in Cuba (where their names were changed to \"y Lobo\", the Spanish word for \"wolf\"). In 1961, the couple moved to Israel where Ricardo was assigned the Cuban ambassador by Fidel Castro. After Ricardo retired from his diplomatic post in 1973, the Wolfs spent the rest of their lives in Israel. In 1975, they founded the Wolf Foundation which awards the Wolf Prize since 1978. Ricardo Wolf died at Herzliya in February 1981, and Francisca died there one month later at an age of 81."
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[
"El Lebrijano"
] |
Who is older, Ray Obiedo or Alfred Harcourt?
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Ray Obiedo Ray Obiedo (born January 27, 1952 in Richmond, California) is an American contemporary jazz guitarist. Obiedo grew up in Richmond, California, a graduate of John F. Kennedy High School, and began playing guitar at age 17. Initially he played both jazz and R&B, appearing on record with Herbie Hancock, Julian Priester, and Sheila E. He was the leader of the jazz fusion group Kick and the rock band Rhythmus 21. In 1989 he signed with Windham Hill Records, with whom he released five albums in eight years. With Bill Summers & Summers Heat With Pete Escovedo With Herbie Hancock With Sheila E.
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[
"Alfred Richards Alfred Richards may refer to:",
"Alfred Ellis Alfred Ellis may refer to:",
"James Harcourt James Harcourt (20 April 187318 February 1951) was an English character actor. Harcourt was born in Headingley, Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire. He started work as a cabinet maker, and drifted into amateur dramatics. He appeared as a stage actor first in 1903 and worked with the Liverpool Repertory Company from 1919 to 1931, and was with the Old Vic in the mid 1940s. In 1947, Harcourt appeared in the original West End production of the popular musical \"Bless the Bride\", directed by Wendy Toye. He was married to the actress Isadora Keith, and was the father of camera operator and cinematographer David Harcourt. He died in Eton, Buckinghamshire on 18 February 1951 aged 77.",
"Alfred Acur Alfred Acur Okodi (born 25 December 1954) is an Anglican bishop who presided over the Diocese of West Lango from 2014 to 2018 in Uganda. Okodi was born in Alebtong District and was educated at Uganda Christian University. He was ordained in 1991. He has served as Vicar of St. Stephen, Nsambya; Archdeacon of Kampala South; Sub Dean of All Saints' Cathedral, Kampala and Kampala Diocesan Mission Coordinator.",
"Alfred Lewis Alfred Lewis may refer to:",
"Alfred Rolfe Alfred Rolfe may refer to:",
"Alfred Lawrence Alfred Lawrence may refer to:",
"Ephraim Obot Ephraim Silas Obot (October 6, 1936 – April 12, 2009) was the Nigeria bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Idah on Nigeria from his appointment on December 17, 1977, until his death in 2009. Obot was first ordained as a Roman Catholic priest on June 29, 1968, Ikot Ekpene, Nigeria. He died on April 12, 2009, at the age of 72.",
"Alfred Evans Alfred Evans may refer to:",
"Camillus Archibong Etokudoh Camillus Archibong Etokudoh (born 1949), is a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. He is the third Bishop of Port Harcourt, appointed by Pope Benedict XVI on 4 May 2009, to oversee the Diocese of Port Harcourt. Born in Ikot Uko Etor in Essien Udim local government area of Akwa Ibom State, Archibong was ordained a priest on 2 July 1978. He has served as Titular Bishop of Capra (1988–1989), Auxiliary Bishop of Ikot Ekpene (1988–1989) and Bishop of Ikot Ekpene (1989–2009)."
] |
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[
"Alfred Harcourt"
] |
Which film has the director born first, Federal Agent or I Vitelloni?
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Federal Agent Federal Agent is a 1936 American crime film directed by Sam Newfield and written by Barry Barringer. The film stars William Boyd, Irene Ware, Don Alvarado, Lenita Lane, George Cooper and Charles A. Browne. The film was released on April 14, 1936, by Republic Pictures.
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[
"Italian Secret Service Italian Secret Service (also known as Il nostro agente Natalino Tartufato) is a 1968 Italian comedy film directed by Luigi Comencini. For his performance in this film and in \"Il padre di famiglia\", Nino Manfredi was awarded with a Golden Plate at the 1968 Edition of David di Donatello. Assassination attempts are constantly bungled.",
"The Secret Agent Club The Secret Agent Club is a 1996 American spy action comedy film starring Hulk Hogan and directed by John Murlowski. The film is about a secret spy (Hulk Hogan) who steals a laser gun and pretends that it is a toy but gets in deep trouble when the people find out who he stole the gun from. When Ray Chase, an agent so secret even his son doesn't know, brings home a high-powered laser gun he stole, the theft victim sends her henchmen to capture Ray and get the gun back. But Ray's son escapes with the gun and then devises a plan to rescue his dad. Platinum Disc was released on DVD on February 8, 2005.",
"Special Agent (1935 film) Special Agent is a 1935 American drama film directed by William Keighley and starring Bette Davis and George Brent. The screenplay by Laird Doyle and Abem Finkel is based on a story by Martin Mooney. The film was produced by Cosmopolitan Productions and released by Warner Bros. The federal government seeks to imprison gangsters due to their financial crimes, tax evasion and violations of Internal Revenue Service regulations. Newspaper reporter Bill Bradford is deputized as a treasury agent by the Internal Revenue Bureau and assigned to find enough evidence to charge gangster Alexander Carston (who has the same initials as Al Capone) with tax evasion. He learns that Carston's ledgers are kept in a code known only to his secretary, Julie Gardner. When she witnesses the murder of a man who double-crossed her boss, Bill begs her to quit her job, but Julie realizes she knows too much for Carston to let her go. District Attorney Roger Quinn pressures the murdered man's partner into testifying, but Carston learns of the plan and the witness is murdered and Carston is acquitted. Julie is arrested as a material witness and decodes the books, but is kidnapped by Carston's henchmen before she can testify. Bill tricks Carston into taking him where Julie is being held, and the police trail them. A shootout follows and Julie is rescued. Her testimony sends Carston to Alcatraz, and she accepts Bill's marriage proposal. \"Special Agent\" was one of three 1935 films co-starring Bette Davis and George Brent, who appeared on-screen together a total of thirteen times. Neither was happy with the finished product. Brent told Ruth Waterbury of \"Photoplay\" that the picture was \"a poor, paltry thing, unbelievable and unconvincing.\" At the behest of the Warner Bros. publicity department, his comments remained unpublished. The film, featuring a law enforcement officer triumphing over gangsters was released by Warners in the same year as \"G Men\". The film was made just after the Hays Office started to enforce the Production Code. They insisted on several minor changes and wanted a scene producer Sam Bischoff felt was crucial to the plot to be cut in its entirety. The censors compromised by allowing it to remain intact but without what they considered offensive dialogue. As a result, Ricardo Cortez' lips can be seen moving but nothing is heard on the soundtrack.",
"The Undercover Man The Undercover Man is a 1949 American crime film noir directed by Joseph H. Lewis and starring Glenn Ford. Frank Warren is a treasury agent assigned to put an end to the activities of a powerful mob crime boss. The agent struggles to put together a case but is frustrated when all he finds are terrified witnesses and corrupt police officers. Although most informants end up dead, Agent Warren gets critical information about the mob from an unlikely source. The film was based on an article titled \"He Trapped Capone,\" the first part of the autobiography \"Undercover Man\" by Federal Agent Frank J. Wilson, which was serialized in \"Collier's\" in 1947. Many details were fictionalized. The timeframe was changed from the Prohibition era to the postwar era. Chicago became an unnamed fairly-nondescript big city. Al Capone was referred to only as the shadowy \"Big Fellow\" and photographed only from the rear and was a more diversified mobster rather than primarily a bootlegger (reflecting the change in US organized crime following Prohibition's repeal). Also, of course, IRS Criminal Investigator Frank Wilson became IRS Criminal Investigator Frank Warren. Nevertheless, the film authentically portrayed the efforts of Wilson's team to put together a tax evasion case against Capone, and in many respects, despite the name changes and nondescript settings, the film is a far more accurate depiction of the investigation than later films on the same subject like \"The Untouchables\". For example, in \"The Untouchables\" the judge presiding over Capone's trial abruptly changes juries in the middle of the case, something that would never happen in real life. What actually happened was that the judge switched jury panels just before the trial began, and the incident is accurately portrayed in \"The Undercover Man\". Bosley Crowther panned the film in \"The New York Times\": \"Furthermore—and this is fatal—it is a drearily static film, for all its explosive flurries of gun-play and passing of violent threats. The big crisis in the picture comes when the Treasury man, played by Glenn Ford, is uncertain whether to stick with the case or retire to a farm. And the basis of his decision to go on sleuthing for Uncle Sam is a long-winded lecture on justice which a sad-eyed Italian woman gives. Mr.",
"The Infiltrator (2016 film) The Infiltrator is a 2016 American biographical crime thriller film directed by Brad Furman and written by Ellen Brown Furman. The film is based on the eponymous autobiography by Robert Mazur, a U.S. Customs special agent, who in the 1980s helped bust Pablo Escobar's money-laundering organization by going undercover as a corrupt businessman. The film stars Bryan Cranston, Diane Kruger, Benjamin Bratt, John Leguizamo, Saïd Taghmaoui, Joe Gilgun and Amy Ryan. Filming began on February 23, 2015, in London. The film premiered at the Tampa Theatre. During the 1980s, U.S. Customs Service special agent Robert Mazur uses his undercover alias \"Bob Musella\" to become a pivotal player for drug lords laundering their dirty cash. Later, he infiltrates the world's largest cartel, and helps expose the money-laundering organization of drug lord Pablo Escobar and take down the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), which had secretly taken illegal ownership of First American Bankshares in Washington, D.C. The project was first announced by \"The Hollywood Reporter\" on October 8, 2014, with Brad Furman as director and Bryan Cranston as Robert Mazur; Miriam Segal produced the film for her Good Films banner along with George Films. Relativity International was announced to sell the film to foreign distributors at the American Film Market. On February 13, 2015, Diane Kruger was chosen to star for the unspecified female lead role. Benjamin Bratt was selected to star in the film as Roberto Alcaino, the agent's contact who dealt directly with cartel board members, including Escobar. On March 10, 2015, additional cast members were chosen, including John Leguizamo, Amy Ryan, Olympia Dukakis, Elena Anaya, and Juliet Aubrey. Broad Green Pictures acquired the US rights to the film on May 21, 2015. Cranston and Leguizamo previously worked together in \"The Lincoln Lawyer\", which Furman directed. Filming was previously set to begin in March 2015 in Tampa, Florida, but then moved to London and Paris. According to \"SSN Insider\", filming began on February 23, 2015.",
"Nazi Agent Nazi Agent is a 1942 American spy film directed by Jules Dassin, in his first feature-length film for MGM. It stars Conrad Veidt playing identical twins, one loyal to the United States (U.S.), the other a dedicated German Nazi. The U.S. has not yet entered World War II when kindly stamp dealer Otto Becker (Conrad Veidt) is unexpectedly visited by his twin brother, Baron Hugo von Detner, the new German consul to the U.S. and one of the leaders of a spy ring engaged in sabotage. The brothers have not seen each other in years, but now von Detner wants to use Becker's shop to transmit and receive secret messages. Becker refuses, until von Detner threatens to have him deported back to Germany as an illegal immigrant and reveals that Becker's assistant, Miss Harper (Dorothy Tree), is actually a German agent. Becker becomes a prisoner in his own store, watched constantly. When he gives his good friend and fellow stamp enthusiast, Professor Jim Sterling (Ivan F. Simpson), a message to go to the police, Sterling is killed in a \"traffic accident\". Von Detner then comes to deal with the betrayal by his brother; the two men struggle and the Nazi is shot dead. Thinking quickly, Becker assumes von Detner's identity. Nobody detects the substitution except Fritz (Frank Reicher), an old family servant and lately von Detner's butler; Becker first realizes that Fritz has discovered his true identity when he sees that Fritz left him a glass of milk as a nightcap instead of wine, knowing that Becker has always preferred this more-healthful beverage instead of alcohol --- \"I knew it was you, Otto, when I saw the old bayonet-scar on your back as I was helping you dress after your shower; remember that I myself tended that wound for you.\" Fritz remains faithful to Becker, however, and keeps his secret. Meanwhile, as he continues to pass as von Detner, Becker starts feeding what he learns about the spy ring's operations to the police via anonymous telephone calls. Becker becomes acquainted with Kaaren De Relle (Anne Ayars). She had been a secret agent loyal to the Nazis, but has become disillusioned by what she has seen and now continues with her duties for the spy ring only to prevent the Nazis from taking retribution against her family still in occupied France. She had spurned von Detner's romantic advances in the past.",
"Secret Agent Super Dragon Secret Agent Super Dragon (Italian: New York chiama Superdrago) is a 1966 international co-production Eurospy film directed by Giorgio Ferroni and starring Ray Danton as the titular secret agent. The plot centers on a secret agent and an evil organization that is drugging people for world domination. After his colleague is killed, the eponymous Secret Agent Super Dragon comes out of retirement to investigate. The main character discovers that the culprits in this crime are actually part of an international crime syndicate, and that they are smuggling the drugs in imported vases. \"Secret Agent Super Dragon\" was released in France on May 24, 1966.",
"Underground Agent Underground Agent is a 1942 drama film directed by Michael Gordon and starring Bruce Bennett, Leslie Brooks, Frank Albertson, and Julian Rivero. The film was released by Columbia Pictures. Two U.S. government agents (Bruce Bennett and Frank Albertson) are assigned to prevent Nazi spies involved in a eavesdropping scheme from infiltrating into a Southern California war-defense plant. To help them in their venture, one of the agents invents an ingenious word-scrambler that eventually leads them to the German spies.",
"Alias (TV series) Alias is an American action thriller and science fiction television series created by J. J. Abrams, which was broadcast on ABC for five seasons from September 30, 2001, to May 22, 2006. It stars Jennifer Garner as Sydney Bristow, a double agent for the Central Intelligence Agency posing as an operative for SD-6, a worldwide criminal and espionage organization. Main co-stars throughout all five seasons included Michael Vartan as Michael Vaughn, Ron Rifkin as Arvin Sloane, and Victor Garber as Jack Bristow. The first two seasons of \"Alias\" mainly explore Sydney's obligation to hide her true career from her friends and family as she assumes multiple aliases to carry out missions as well as her efforts to take down SD-6 with the help of the CIA. The series' later seasons deal with multiple character and plot driven storylines, with a recurring focus on the search for and recovery of artifacts created by Milo Rambaldi, a fictitious Renaissance-era figure with similarities to both Leonardo da Vinci and Nostradamus. \"Alias\" was well received among critics and has been included in several \"best of\" lists, including the American Film Institute's top ten list for television programs in 2003. The series also received numerous awards and nominations. \"Alias\" is considered to be part of a wave of television series from the late 1990s and early 2000s that feature strong female characters, alongside \"Buffy the Vampire Slayer\", \"\", \"La Femme Nikita\", and \"Dark Angel\". Seven years before the first episode, Sydney Bristow was an undergraduate student. She was approached by someone who claimed to work for the Central Intelligence Agency and offered her a job as an agent. Having accepted, she was assigned to a unit called SD-6, which she was told was a secret \"Black Ops\" section of the CIA. She became a field agent. In the pilot, she tells her fiancé Danny Hecht (played by Edward Atterton) that she is a spy and as a result of her revealing SD-6's existence to an outsider, Danny is murdered by SD-6. She discovers that her father Jack Bristow is also an SD-6 agent and that SD-6 is not part of the CIA; instead, it is part of the Alliance of Twelve, an organization that is an enemy to the United States.",
"I falsari I falsari is a 1951 Italian crime film. It is the directorial debut by Franco Rossi."
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"Federal Agent"
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Which country the director of film First Lady Of The Revolution is from?
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First Lady of the Revolution First Lady of the Revolution is a 2016 feature-length documentary film about former first lady of Costa Rica Henrietta Boggs. The documentary is a Spark Media film and was directed and produced by Andrea Kalin. While visiting an aunt and uncle in the exotic countryside of Costa Rica, a young southern belle from Alabama accepted a ride on the back of a motorcycle belonging to a local charismatic farmer — a ride that would propel her down narrow mountain roads and into history. "First Lady of the Revolution" is the story of Henrietta Boggs, who fell in love with a foreign land and the man destined to transform its identity. Her marriage to José Figueres Ferrer in 1941 led to a decade-long journey through activism, exile and political upheaval and, ultimately, lasting progressive reforms. First Lady of the Revolution is not only a depiction of the momentous struggle to shape Costa Rica's democratic identity; it's also a portrayal of how a courageous woman escaped the confines of a traditional, sheltered existence to expand her horizons into a new world, and live a life she never imagined. "First Lady of the Revolution" debuted in Birmingham, Alabama, at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival on August 27, 2016, where it won the Audience Award for Best Alabama Film and a Jury Award Honorable Mention. Henrietta Boggs also received the inaugural Spirit of Sidewalk Award. The film had its Costa Rican premiere on September 13, 2016, at the Cine Magaly in San José, followed by a limited theatrical run in Costa Rica, New York City and Mexico. The United States premiere was held at The Capri Theatre in Montgomery, Alabama, with Henrietta Boggs MacGuire and director Andrea Kalin in attendance and answering audience questions. The film broadcast in 2018 as part of Reel South on PBS, a series that exhibits documentaries focusing on the Southern United States and the region's diverse voices and points of view. Following its premiere at Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival in 2016, Rick Harmon of "Montgomery Advertiser" wrote "It's a fascinating documentary...it leaves viewers hungering for more..." According to Eric Ginsburg of Triad City Beat "First Lady of the Revolution" "offers a unique perspective on a conflict that’s often overlooked." "First Lady of the Revolution" was the winner of the Audience Choice Award at Fairhope Film Festival and the Hoka Award for Best Documentary Feature at Oxford International Film Festival.
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[
"The Lady and the Duke The Lady and the Duke () is a 2001 period drama film by French director Éric Rohmer. The film was inspired by \"Ma vie sous la révolution\", the colourful memoirs of Grace Elliott, an Edinburgh-born royalist caught up in the political intrigue following the French Revolution. According to a description of the film in \"The Guardian\", Rohmer's \"customary verbal sparring and complex intellectual arguments are spiced by lavish sets, suspenseful plotting and the continuous threat of violence.\" The film was criticised by many viewers in France because of its uncompromising presentation of revolutionary violence; some described it as reactionary or monarchist propaganda. Asked about this, Lucy Russell remarked: \"There does seem to be a great problem, not just in France, but every country has problems facing up to the nasty parts of its history. But there's a reason it was called the Terror.\" r",
"Mrs Ratcliffe's Revolution Mrs Ratcliffe's Revolution is a 2007 British comedy drama film, directed by Bille Eltringham and starring Catherine Tate, Iain Glen and Brittany Ashworth, about a British family who move to East Germany in 1968, during the Cold War. It was filmed in Hungary and the United Kingdom (UK), and was released on 9 July 2007 at the Cambridge Film Festival, and nationwide in the UK on 28 September. , \"Mrs Ratcliffe's Revolution\" holds an 83% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on six reviews with an average rating of 5.6/10. Because of its limited release, there were few reviews, but \"Channel 4 Online\" and \"The Guardian Films\" cited the film as a vehicle for the blooming film careers of both Catherine Tate and Brittany Ashworth. The film won the Audience Award at the Wurzburg International Film Weekend.",
"Luis R. Vera Luis Roberto Vera Vargas (born 1952) is a Chilean film director, producer, writer and professor of communications. Vargas was born in Santiago, Chile. He left the country following the 1973 military coup and came first to Peru as a refugee, and then later to Romania where he studied in film at the University of Bucharest. In 1979, he came as a refugee to Sweden. He is the father of the Swedish Left Party politician America Vera Zavala.",
"First Lady of Madagascar First Lady of Madagascar (French: \"Première Dame du Madagascar\") is the title attributed to the wife of the president of Madagascar. The country's current first lady is Voahangy Rajaonarimampianina, wife of President Hery Rajaonarimampianina, who had held the position since January 25, 2014. There has been no first gentlemen of Madagascar to date.",
"First Ladies and Gentlemen of Costa Rica First Lady or First Gentleman of Costa Rica (Spanish: \"Primera dama o Primer caballero de Costa Rica\") is the title of the wife or husband of the president of Costa Rica. Traditionally, the president's wife was colloquially known as \"la presidenta\" (\"the president\", with a feminine -a ending). The current term was first used under Federico Alberto Tinoco Granados. The Office of First Lady of First Gentleman is allocated no official funding from the government budget of Costa Rica. Instead, the office and officeholder relies on private donations to cover the expenses. These funds support the first lady's causes and foundations, which traditionally focus on cultural, environmental, and social issues. The office of Leila Rodríguez Stahl, the first lady 2002 to 2006, had a staff of approximately 60 at its largest. However, many of those staffers worked pro bono or were employed temporarily from other government offices.",
"Children of the Revolution (1923 film) Children of the Revolution (German: Kinder der Revolution) is a 1923 German silent film directed by Hans Theyer and starring Carl Heinz Fischer, Oscar Beregi and Albert von Kersten. The film's sets were designed by the art director Hans Rouc. It was shot at the Sievering Studios in Vienna.",
"First Lady of Peru The first lady of Peru (Spanish: \"Primera Dama del Perú\") is the title held by the spouse or designated female family member of the president of Peru. The role usually fulfills functions of social work and accompanying the president. There have been a number of first ladies that have been foreign to Peru. Lilia Paredes is the current first lady of Peru, as wife of the 63rd president of Peru, Pedro Castillo. The first pioneer of political leadership in Peru was , wife of President Manuel A. Odría, who developed extensive social work throughout the country aimed at those who needed it most. In September 1919, , wife of Augusto B. Leguía (who had assumed the presidency in July of that year), died in London, unable to accompany her husband during the eleven years that he ruled. In 1956, President Manuel Prado Ugarteche asked the Roman Rota to annul his marriage to , who had already been first lady, which led a group of Catholic society ladies to go out dressed in mourning through the streets of Lima. The president remarried the socialite Clorinda Málaga Bravo in 1958, and until then the position was assumed by his daughter, Rosa Prado Garland de Parks. In 1963, Fernando Belaúnde Terry assumed the presidency of the Republic, but the position of first lady was assumed by his sister Lucila Belaúnde de Cruchaga and by her daughter Carolina Belaúnde on some occasions, since the president was divorced from Carola Aubry. However, in 1966, on the occasion of the visit of Charles de Gaulle, the position was assumed by Carmen Jaime Torres, wife of the president of the Senate, Ramiro Prialé, interpreting the Congress that since the president of the Executive lacked a wife, the position should be assumed. by the wife of the President of the Legislative Assembly. One First Lady who dedicated a lot of effort to welfare work was , the second wife of Belaúnde Terry, who developed a series of actions with well-known Peruvian women, being also the creator of the so-called \"family kitchens.\" Pilar Nores, Alan García's wife, created in the eighties the \"Foundation for the Children of Peru\", an institution dedicated to children in need and that would later be presided over by future first ladies. Susana Higuchi, Alberto Fujimori's wife, took over this foundation until her separation from her husband.",
"Marieta de Veintemilla Marieta de Veintimilla (1855-1907) was an Ecuadorian writer, feminist and politician. She served as the first lady of Ecuador during the presidency of her unmarried uncle, president Ignacio de Veintemilla 1876-1883. As first lady, she introduced many changes in dress and social attitude in gender roles: she made the upper class women of Ecuador cast off the black costumes they dressed in at the time and adopt European fashion in bright colors, and she also liberated women's space of movement by making it acceptable for women to walk in the streets without a male guardian as company, after setting an example by doing so herself in her position as first lady, walking about in the streets in public alone or in the company of a female friend. In 1882, her uncle was absent from the capital of Quito in another part of the country. When civil war broke out during his absence, she took control of the capital, the government and its military forces in the name of her uncle's office and commanded the defense of Quite when it was attacked by the rebels in 1883. She was a such referred to as \"Generalita\". She was the first female in Ecuador to have wielded such power. After the defeat, she was imprisoned. She was released in 1884 and forced into exile. After her return to Ecuador in 1898, she became a leading figure in the newly founded women's movement in Ecuador as a writer and by making speeches in feminist issues.",
"The Marriage Revolution The Marriage Revolution (Spanish:La revolución matrimonial) is a 1974 Spanish comedy film directed by José Antonio Nieves Conde and starring Analía Gadé, José Luis López Vázquez and Ismael Merlo.",
"Hisila: From Revolutionary to First Lady Hisila: from Revolutionary to First Lady is a 2021 memoir by Nepalese politician Hisila Yami. It was published by Penguin Random House. The book contains chronicles of her life, from being born in a Newar family, being a student in India, meeting and marrying Baburam Bhattarai, becoming a Maoist revolutionary, wife of Bhattarai, and being a mother. \"Hisila: from Revolutionary to First Lady\" received mixed reviews from critics. \"The Record\" said that this book is a must-read for \"those interested in the social sciences, especially gender and social inclusion, and the history and political economy of the Nepali civil war\"."
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"American"
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Are Knappa High School and Rio Grande High School both located in the same country?
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Rio Grande High School Rio Grande High School is a public high school located in South Valley, New Mexico, United States, with an Albuquerque postal address. It is part of the Albuquerque Public Schools system. RGHS competes in the New Mexico Activities Association (NMAA), as a class 6A school in District 5. In 2014, the NMAA realigned the state's schools in to six classifications and adjusted district boundaries. Other schools in District 5-6A include West Mesa High School, Albuquerque High School, Valley High School and Atrisco Heritage Academy High School. The Ravens have talented baseball and wrestling teams. The wrestlers have placed second in state in recent years.
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[
"Río Grande, Jalisco Río Grande is a town in the municipality of San Martín de Hidalgo in the state of Jalisco, Mexico. It has a population of 141 inhabitants.",
"Mission Heights Preparatory High School Mission Heights Preparatory High School (MHPHS) is a public charter high school in Casa Grande, Arizona, United States. It was established in 2011 and is operated by The Leona Group. For athletics, it is a member of the Canyon Athletic Association (CAA).",
"Río Grande, Jayuya, Puerto Rico Río Grande is a barrio in the municipality of Jayuya, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 879.",
"Kiamba National High School Kiamba National High School (KNHS) is one of the three public high schools in the municipality of Kiamba, Sarangani. It was founded in 1987 as an annex municipal high school of Colon Barangay High School in its nearby municipality of Maasim, Sarangani.",
"Rio Hondo Independent School District Rio Hondo Independent School District is a public school district based in Rio Hondo, Texas, United States. In addition to Rio Hondo, the district serves the communities of Arroyo Colorado Estates, Lozano, and Villa del Sol. In 2009, the school district was rated \"academically acceptable\" by the Texas Education Agency.",
"Valley High School (New Mexico) Valley High School is a public high school in the city limits of Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States. It is part of the Albuquerque Public Schools district. The school opened in 1954 and enrolls around 1,800 students. VHS competes in the New Mexico Activities Association (NMAA), as a class 6A school in District 5. In 2014, the NMAA realigned the state's schools in to six classifications and adjusted district boundaries. In addition to Valley High School, the schools in District 5-6A include West Mesa High School, Rio Grande High School, Albuquerque High School and Atrisco Heritage Academy High School.",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Rio Grande The Diocese of Rio Grande (, ) is a Roman Catholic diocese located in the city of Rio Grande in the Ecclesiastical province of Pelotas in Brazil. The Diocese was established from the Diocese of Pelotas in 1971 and is located at the Cathedral of Saint Peter in Rio Grande.",
"Río Grande District Río Grande District may refer to:",
"Rio Grande, New Jersey Rio Grande () is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) located within Middle Township and Lower Township in Cape May County, New Jersey, United States. Though for the 1990 to 2010 U.S. censuses the CDP was entirely located within Middle Township, a small section at the southern edge of the community, located in Lower Township, is sometimes called Rio Grande. For the 2020 U.S. Census the boundary was redrawn so that portions of Lower Township were included in the Rio Grande CDP. It is part of the Ocean City Metropolitan Statistical Area. As of the 2010 United States Census, the CDP's population was 2,670. According to Jeffrey M. Dorwart, Rio Grande was founded in the mid-nineteenth century around a country store owned by the Hildreth family. The community was originally called Hildreth for that reason. George F. Boyer and J. Pearson Cunningham explain that, during the colonial period, Aaron Leaming, the Hildreths and the Cresses had plantations in that area. Where the King's Highway crossed the road coming from Dennisville and Goshen a stage coach terminal was set up, and the spot became the center for trade for the local farming families. Boyer and Cunningham say that the area was known as \"Leamings,\" for the prominent landholders, or as \"Hildreth,\" the family who ran the local store. (p. 121-122) They continue, \"The name, Rio Grande, was suggested by the seventh Aaron Leaming who thought this southern United States river had an attractive sound.\" According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP had a total area of 2.490 square miles (6.450 km), including 2.459 square miles (6.369 km) of land and 0.031 square miles (0.081 km) of water (1.26%). The climate in this area is characterized by hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Rio Grande has a humid subtropical climate, abbreviated \"Cfa\" on climate maps. As of the 2000 United States Census there were 2,444 people, 1,029 households, and 658 families living in the CDP. The population density was 399.8/km (1,036.8/mi).",
"Rio School District Rio School District is a school district in Ventura County, California. The district serves students in the northeast portion of the city of Oxnard and the unincorporated communities of El Rio and Nyeland Acres. Rio feeds into the Oxnard Union High School District, specifically Rio Mesa and Pacifica high schools. The Rio School District was founded in 1885 with the opening of a one-room schoolhouse on a ranch in what is now El Rio. The first class had at most 13 students. In 2018, the district purchased a new headquarters building on Solar Drive in northeast Oxnard. The office space is shared with the Oxnard Union High School District, who relocated from their previous facilities on K Street in the flight path of Oxnard Airport."
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[
"yes"
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What is the place of birth of the presenter of Kvn?
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KVNA KVNA may refer to:
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[
"KVAN KVAN may refer to:",
"KSN KSN may refer to:",
"KVCN KVCN (106.7 MHz) is an FM radio station licensed to Los Alamos, New Mexico, and serving Northern New Mexico, including Santa Fe and Albuquerque. It broadcasts a Christian radio format featuring programming from its owner's network, VCY America. KVCN has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 44,000 watts. The transmitter tower is on a high peak in Jemez Springs, in the Valles Caldera National Preserve, west of Los Alamos. Programming is also heard on a network of FM translators around New Mexico and Southern Colorado. 106.7 signed on in 1987 as KBOM with a Spanish Contemporary music format. In 1990 it would be home to an Oldies format for northern New Mexico branded as \"K-Bomb\" with slogans such as \"Oldies Blast From the Past\". The name referenced the city of license Los Alamos as being the birthplace of the atomic bomb. In 2000, it would be purchased by American General Media (AGM) along with Santa Fe area stations 107.5, 94.7, 1260 and 1400 from Withers Broadcasting Co. for $7 million. (The rest of the cluster would eventually be sold to Hutton Broadcasting). AGM already had its own oldies station on KABG, however the K-Bomb format would relocate to the 94.7 frequency in Santa Fe, although AGM would bring a permanent end to it in 2002. In early 2001, AGM would launch \"The Planet\" on 106.7 as KKPL with a modern rock format that used the slogan \"World Class Modern Rock\". However, soon after its debut, Citadel Communications, a major player in the Albuquerque/Santa Fe radio market, would change two of its stations to rock formats, including a similar format on 103.3 FM as well as a classic rock station to compete against Clear Channel, which had owned most of the market rock radio stations at the time. This would put KKPL in competition with about six other area rock stations for advertising revenue. Longtime KTEG morning host \"Buck\" was among the local personalities at this short-lived station. Therefore, in late September 2001, after only nine months on the air, AGM had thrown in the towel and changed 106.7 to a Spanish language music format as \"Radio Sol\" with call letters KZNM.",
"KVFC KVFC (740 AM) is a radio station in Cortez, Colorado broadcasting a News Talk Information format. KVFC was among the first radio stations in the Four Corners Region, first licensed in 1955 to Cortez businessman Jack Hawkins. Today, KVFC-AM is located on Hawkins Street in Cortez, named after the station's founder. The station is currently owned by Winton Road Broadcasting, Co. and carries a weekday line-up of Rush Limbaugh, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly and Neal Boortz, among others. It currently simulcasts with KENN (AM) in Farmington, New Mexico. 740 AM is a Canadian clear-channel frequency, on which CFZM in Toronto, Ontario is the dominant Class A station.",
"KVWE KVWE may refer to:",
"KVYN KVYN (99.3 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Saint Helena, California, and serving the Napa Valley and Wine Country of Northern California. The station broadcasts an adult album alternative (AAA) radio format and is owned by licensee Wine Down Media LLC. The radio studios and offices are located at 135 Gasser Drive, Suite D in Napa, California. KVYN has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 6,000 watts. The transmitter is off Silverado Trail in Yountville, California. The station was founded by Thomas L. Young and initially signed on the air in 1975. In May 2017 an announcement was made that the station along with sister station KVON had been sold by Wine Country Broadcasting to Wine Down Media. The transaction was consummated on August 1, 2017. The station is also heard in Calistoga, California, through an FM translator at 103.5 MHz.",
"KVIN KVIN (920 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station broadcasting an Oldies radio format. Licensed to Ceres, California, it serves the Stockton and Modesto radio markets. The station is owned by Threshold Communications and airs Top 40 hits from the 1950s, 60s and 70s. Most hours, the station is automated. On Saturday nights a big band show is featured, \"Swing Thing\" hosted by Fred Hall. KVIN has two FM translator stations rebroadcasting its programming: 92.3 K222BX in Modesto and 107.1 K296HL in Manteca. KVIN is one of few AM radio stations that increases its power at night. By day, KVIN runs at 500 watts but at sunset, power increases to 2,500 watts. It uses a directional antenna at all times. The daytime transmitter is off Iowa Avenue in Riverdale Park and the nighttime transmitter is off Hickman Road in Hickman. KVIN and sister station KRVR are the Modesto area's only locally owned radio stations. The station first signed on the air on September 15, 1963, as KLOC. It was founded by country music artist Chester Smith, who served as general manager. The station was a daytimer, required to go off the air from sunset to sunrise. Reflecting its owner, KLOC played only Country and Western music. The station was acquired by Threshold Communications in 2001 for $400,000. The call sign was changed to KVIN. It formerly featured programming provided from Jones Radio Network and Dial Global. It was a network affiliate of Westwood One's \"America's Best Music\" until December 2013.",
"Kraig Kann Kraig Kann (born on May 3, 1966 in LaGrange, Illinois) is a former on-air personality on Golf Channel, former chief communications officer of the LPGA, and current Managing Director of Kann Advisory Group and Host on SiriusXM PGA TOUR Radio. Kann was one of Golf Channel’s original on-air personalities Golf Channel from its founding in 1995 until his announced resignation on August 17 2011 to assume an administrative position at the LPGA. While at Golf Channel, he was involved in a variety of broadcast positions, including \"Golf Central\", \"Golf Central Pre-Game\" and as a play-by-play announcer for PGA Tour, LPGA, and Nationwide Tour coverage. He also reported on-site for the station's coverage of The Masters, the U.S. Open, the Open Championship, the PGA Championship, and the Ryder Cup. Kann is a 1988 graduate of the University of Missouri. Prior to joining Golf Channel, Kann spent time in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Fort Myers, Columbus, Georgia, and Columbia, Missouri. Kann has three children.",
"KVGB (AM) KVGB 1590 AM is a radio station of the news and Talk radio format, broadcasting general interest talk programs from hosts such as Jim Bohannon, George Noory Dave Ramsey and Kim Komando, based in Great Bend, United States. It is owned by Eagle Communications Inc. Eagle Communications owns other Kansas radio stations in Salina, Hutchinson, Hays, Great Bend, Pratt, Hoisington and Hill City. One of the oldest radio stations in western Kansas, KVGB first signed on the air in the late 1940s. KVGB went to a 24-hour broadcast schedule on October 14, 2001.",
"KKRN KKRN is a radio station broadcasting a community radio format licensed to Bella Vista, California and serves the cities/towns of Round Mountain, California, Burney, California, and Redding, California. KKRN began broadcasting on May 12, 2008."
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"Sverdlovsk"
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What is the date of death of the composer of film Thirudathe?
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Thirudathe Thirudathe () is a 1961 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by P. Neelakantan. A remake of the Hindi film "Pocket Maar" (1956), it stars M. G. Ramachandran, B. Saroja Devi and M. N. Nambiar. The film, produced by V. Arunachalam, had musical score by S. M. Subbaiah Naidu and was released on 23 March 1961. "Thirudathe" ran 100 days in theatres. The film was remade in Kannada as "Manassakshi" (1968). Balu is a small-time thief. Once he happens to steal money from a woman named Savithri's brother who is the breadwinner of the family. After his death the family has to be taken care by Balu, his stealing attitude changes when his mother came to know that his son was a thief and sacrifices her life. How the family is saved forms the rest of the story. The film, a remake of the Hindi film "Pocket Maar" (1956), was directed by P. Neelakandan and V. Arunachalam under A. L. S. Productions, with story written by Chinna Annamalai and dialogues written by Kannadasan and Ma. Lakshmanan. Lakshmanan came up with two titles for the film: "Thirudathe" (Do not steal) and "Nalladhukku Kaalamillai" (Goodness stands no chance), recommending the latter. M. G. Ramachandran objected, believing that audiences would think the title would represent his own opinion, and that the film actually exhorts people not to do wrong. Hence, the former title was finalised. B. Saroja Devi was cast as the lead actress at Ramachandran's insistence. The music was composed by S. M. Subbaiah Naidu. Lyrics by Pattukkottai Kalyanasundaram, Kannadasan, Ku. Sa. Krishnamurthy, Ku. Ma. Balasubramaniam, M. K. Athmanathan, Muthukoothan and Ra. Pazhanisami.Playback singers are T. M. Soundararajan, Seerkazhi Govindarajan, P. B. Sreenivas, S. C. Krishnan, A. L.
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"M. Venkataraju M Venkataraju (1916-1969) was a music director/composer of Kannada cinema.",
"K. V. Mahadevan Krishnankoil Venkadachalam Mahadevan (14 March 1918 – 21 June 2001) was an Indian composer, singer-songwriter, music producer, and musician known for his works in Tamil cinema, Telugu cinema, Kannada cinema, and Malayalam cinema. He is best known for his contributions in works such as \"Manchi Manasulu\" (1962), \"Lava Kusa\" (1963), \"Thiruvilaiyadal\" (1965), \"Saraswathi Sabatham\" (1966), \"Kandan Karunai\" (1967), \"Thillana Mohanambal\" (1968), \"Adimai Penn\" (1969), \"Balaraju Katha\" (1970), \"Athiparasakthi\" (1971), \"Sankarabharanam\" (1979), \"Saptapadi\" (1981), \"Sirivennela\" (1986), \"Sruthilayalu\" (1987), \"Pelli Pustakam\" (1991), and \"Swathi Kiranam\" (1992). A contemporary of M. S. Viswanathan and T. K. Ramamoorthy, starting his career in 1942 with \"Manonmani\", Mahadevan scored music for over six hundred feature films, spanning four decades, and has garnered two National Film Awards, the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Music Director, three Nandi Awards for Best Music Director, and the Filmfare Best Music Director Award (Telugu). He was also conferred the title of \"\"Thirai Isai Thilagam\"\" (Pride of Cine Music Directors) in Tamil cinema. K. V. Mahadevan was born in 1918 at Krishnancoil, a locality in Nagercoil, Kanyakumari District. Father Venkadachalam Bhagavathar and Mother Pichaiyammal K. V. Mahadevan, also called by his honorific name Thirai Isai Thilagam (lit. pride of film music), did music composing for more than 50 years, beginning from 1942 till 1993. Telugu Film Industry crowned him with title \"Swara Brahma\" (Creator/Father of Musical notes).",
"Bharani (composer) Bharani is an Indian film score and soundtrack composer. He has predominantly scored music for Tamil films apart from working in Telugu and Kannada films . He has also sung few of his own compositions. Bharani was born in a village near Tanjore and was the eldest son in a family of three brothers. He studied up until Class 10 and actively used to compose songs during his school days, and came to Chennai in 1989 seeking an opportunity. Bharani, under his real name Gunasekaran, initially made a breakthrough as a lyricist and wrote Vijay's first on screen song for \"Naalaiya Theerpu\" (1992). Bharani was introduced as a music director by director S. A. Chandrasekhar in \"Periyanna\" (1999), before going to gain acclaim for his work in film such as \"Paarvai Ondre Podhume\" (2001) and \"Charlie Chaplin\" (2002). \"Veluthu Kattu\" in 2010 was his twenty fifth venture. He made his directorial debut with \"Ondikatta\" in 2017.",
"Master Venu Madduri Venugopal better known as Master Venu (1916–1981) was a music composer of the Telugu and Tamil cinemas and the father of the actor Bhanu Chander. He was born 1916 in Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India and died 1981 in Chennai, Tamil Nadu.",
"Sethu Eyyal Sethu Eyyal is an Indian director and artist from Eyyal in Thrissur, Kerala. He was an assistant to A. K. Lohithadas. He is well known for his debut film Shyamaragam \"(History in the 100 years of Indian Cinema, a musical guru flows through 4 generations of music family of KJ Yesudas)\", which V. Dakshinamoorthy composed the music for the last time. He started his film career as an assistant director in the A. K. Lohithadas directed movie Kasthuri Maan, Chakram, Chakkara Muthu and Nivedyam.",
"T. S. Raghavendra T. S. Raghavendra (19 September 1945 – 30 January 2020) was an Indian actor, playback singer and occasional music director who concentrated on Tamil-language films. As an actor, he was known as the father character of actress Revathi in \"Vaidehi Kathirunthal\". He also gave music for a few films like \"Uyir\" (old Tamil film), \"Padikkatha Paadam\" and \"Yaaga Saalai\". His wife Sulochana is also a singer His daughter Shekinah Shawn (born Prasanna Raghavendar) who is popular as an Opera singer and daughter Kalpana is also playback singer.",
"Thiruvabharanam (film) Thiruvabharanam is a 1973 Indian Malayalam film, directed by J. Sasikumar and produced by E. K. Thyagarajan. The film stars Prem Nazir, Madhu, Vijayasree, Jayabharathi and Kaviyoor Ponnamma in the lead roles. The film had musical score by R. K. Shekhar. The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.",
"L. P. R. Varma Lakshmipuram Palace Pooram Thirunal Ravi Varma () known as L.P.R. Varma (1926–2003) was a Carnatic musician, lyricist, music director, singer, screen writer, and actor. He conducted a large number of Carnatic music concerts in south India. He performed and composed music for many Malayalam films and professional dramas. He belonged to the Parappanangadi royal family (Malabar – part of North Kerala) and they were settled in Changanassery. He generally performed in Malayalam language. Varma was born in Lakshmipuram Palace, the Puzhavathu, Changanassery in Travancore State. He started music from the age of eight and he was trained under the carnatic musicians such as Muthaiyah Bhagavathar, Semmangudy Sreenivasa Iyer and Madura Keshava Bhagavathar. He acted in Malayalam movie Ayitham (1988) starring Mohanlal as Vishwanatha Bhagavathar. He died on 6 July 2003, aged 76.",
"Snehadeepame Mizhi Thurakku Snehadeepame Mizhi Thurakku is a 1972 Indian Malayalam-language film, directed by P. Bhaskaran. The film stars Madhu, Sharada, Kaviyoor Ponnamma and Adoor Bhasi in the lead roles. The film had musical score by Pukazhenthi. The music was composed by Pukazhenthi and the lyrics were written by P. Bhaskaran.",
"Thirudargal Jakkirathai Thirudargal Jakkirathai () is a 1958 Indian Tamil-language film directed by B. Narasimha Rao. The film stars S. S. Rajendran and G. Varalakshmi. It was simultaneously produced in Telugu with the title Dongalunnaru Jagratha. The film was released on 11 July 1958. List adapted from the database of Film News Anandan The film was produced by G. Krishnamoorthi and directed by B. Narasimha Rao. This film was simultaneously produced in Telugu with the title \"Dongalunnaru Jagratha\" with a different cast. Music was composed by K. V. Mahadevan while the lyrics were penned by Thanjai N. Ramaiah Dass, A. Maruthakasi and Kannadasan."
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[
"26 May 1979"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Ladies' Night In A Turkish Bath?
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Ladies' Night in a Turkish Bath Ladies' Night in a Turkish Bath is a 1928 American silent comedy film directed by Edward F. Cline. It is based on the 1920 play "Ladies' Night" by Charlton Andrews and Avery Hopwood. It was released on April 1, 1928 by First National Pictures. A copy of "Ladies' Night in a Turkish Bath" is housed at the UCLA Film and Television Archive.
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"Tanju Korel Tanju Korel (10 October 1944 – 21 September 2005) was a Turkish actor and documentary director. Tanju Korel was born on 10 October 1944 in Istanbul. After graduating from Galatasaray High School, he continued his education at the University of Grenoble. In 1966, he took part in an acting competition organized by \"Perde\" magazine, where he earned the first place together with the fellow actor Murat Soydan. He made his cinmeatic debut in the same year with a role in the movie \"Eşkiya\". He also appeared in a number of TV series. In 1974, he married actress Hülya Darcan, with whom she had two daughters: Zeynep and Bergüzar. Korel also produced a number of documentaries throughout his career. Korel died on 21 September 2005 after suffering from lung cancer. His remains were buried at the Zincirlikuyu Cemetery.",
"Ladies' Night (play) Ladies' Night (sometimes marketed as \"Ladies' Night in a Turkish Bath\") is a three-act play originally written by Charlton Andrews and later reworked by Avery Hopwood. The play was a sex farce with part of the action set in a Turkish bath instead of a bedroom. A. H. Woods staged it on Broadway, where opened under the direction of Bertram Harrison on August 9, 1920 at the Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre. \"Ladies' Night\" had a run of 375 performances with the final curtain falling in June 1921. It was revived on Broadway in adapted forms in 1945 and 1950. Jimmy Walters is a married man who avoids many social events because of his strong reaction to women who wear modern fashions that expose their bodies. His wife, Dulcy, is annoyed by his behavior. Their friends – the couples Alicia and Fred, and Mimi and Cort – make fun of him. Fred and Cort believe they can cure his anxieties by taking him to a masquerade ball where he will see many women in scanty attire. On the same evening, Alicia and Mimi will take Dulcy to the Larchmont Baths, which is hosting a ladies night event for women only. The second act begins with the group of men dressed in drag for the masquerade, which has been raided by the police. They flee through the first open window they find, which puts them inside the Larchmont Baths. The men pretend to be women to avoid being discovered, a pretense that is made more difficult by Jimmy's reactions to the many barely-clothed women in the baths. In the final act, the couples return to the Walters' apartment, where the men must explain their presence in the baths. As a result of his adventure, Jimmy is cured of his exaggerated response to women's bodies. The characters and cast from the Broadway production are given below: The Broadway production received negative reviews from many critics. In a review for \"The New York Times\", Alexander Woollcott called the play \"a somewhat laborious farce\" that the manager and playwrights intended to explore \"how far they can go without being arrested\". In \"Theatre Magazine\", Arthur Hornblow called the play \"hackneyed\" and not worthy of the authors' talents. A review in \"The Forum\" said the material \"often approaches the obscene. However, it is ridiculously funny, and one cannot help but laugh.",
"Bilge Olgaç Bilge Olgaç (10 January 1940 – 3 March 1994) was a Turkish film director. Bilge Olgaç was born to a poor family in Vize, ilçe (district) of Kırklareli Province on 10 January 1940. While still in vocational school in İstanbul, she married to Vecdi Bender in 1956. She had a son by this marriage. They divorced. In 1994, she had moved to a new house in Beyoğlu, İstanbul. She died during a fire in this house on 3 March 1994. She was writing short stories. Her husband, who was a film industry employee, introduced her to Memduh Ün, a film producer and a director. In 1962, Memduh Ün made a film out of one of her stories \"Kısmetin En Güzeli\" (\"Best of the Fortune\"). She also began working as an assistant of Memduh Ün. In 1965, she directed her first film \"Üçünüze de Mıhlarım\" (\"I Shall Shoot Three of You\"). She was the sole female film director at that time. She also wrote the script of many of her films. In 1970, she directed \"Linç\" (\"Lynch\"), which earned her fame and many awards. Between 1975–1984, she directed commercial films. In 1984, she returned to movie films by her new film \"Kaşık Düşmanı\" (\"Ball and Chain\"). In the same year, she also made \"Yavrularım\" (\"My Little Ones\"), which was a big success. Her later films are on women's issues in rural areas. Although she mostly made movie films in 1987, she also directed a television serial \"Elif Ana-Ayşe Kız\" (\"Mommy Elif – Maid Ayşe\"). When she died she was about to finish her last film \"Bir Yanımız Bahar Bahçe\" (\"Spring Garden on One Side\") The number of films directed by Bilge Olgaç is 37. The annual awards given by the Flying Broom International Women's Film Festival are named after Bilge Olgaç.",
"Ömer Kavur Ömer Kavur (18 June 1944 – 12 May 2005) was a Turkish film director, producer and screenwriter. He directed fourteen films between 1974 and 2003. His film, \"Gece Yolculuğu\" was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. Nine years later, his film \"Akrebin Yolculuğu\" was screened in the same section at the 1997 Festival. He died on 12 May 2005, of lymphoma at his home in Teşvikiye, Istanbul, and was buried at the Zincirlikuyu Cemetery following the religious funeral service held at the Teşvikiye Mosque.",
"Alfred Travers Alfred Travers (born 1906, date of death unknown) is a Turkish-born British screenwriter and film director,",
"Hubert Cornfield Hubert Cornfield (February 9, 1929 — June 18, 2006) was a film director in Hollywood. He was born in Istanbul, Turkey, and died in Los Angeles. Billy Wilder, William Wyler and Joseph L. Mankiewicz all signed his Directors Guild of America (DGA) application. He moved to the US as a refugee in 1941. He received attention for a short film he made \"The Color is Red\" which attracted the interest of 20th Century Fox.",
"The Unforgettable Director of Love Movies The Unforgettable Director of Love Movies () is a 1990 Turkish comedy film directed by Yavuz Turgul.",
"Ertem Eğilmez Ertem Eğilmez (18 February 1929, in Trabzon – 21 September 1989, in Istanbul, Turkey) was a Turkish film director, producer and screenwriter. He is known as the name behind some of the most popular films in Turkish film history. Many of these were produced by his production company Arzu Film.",
"Susanne in the Bath Susanne in the Bath (German: Susanne im Bade) is a 1936 German comedy film directed by Jürgen von Alten and starring Manja Behrens, Max Gülstorff and Erich Fiedler. The title is an allusion to the biblical story of Susanna. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gustav A. Knauer.",
"Süleyman Turan Süleyman Turan (19 November 1936 – 10 September 2019) was a Turkish film and theater actor. Süleyman Turan died at the age of 82 in Istanbul on 10 September 2019. Following the religious funeral service held at Şakirin Mosque, he was interred at Karacaahmet Cemetery. He was survived by his daughter Beliz Turan."
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"May 22, 1961"
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What is the date of death of Elma Sandford-Morgan's father?
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Elma Sandford-Morgan Elma Sandford-Morgan (23 February 1890 – 1983) was an Australian physician who practised medicine in India and Iraq during the 1920s. Elma Linton Sandford (later Mrs Sandford-Morgan) was born in Adelaide, South Australia in 1890. Her father, Alexander Wallace Sandford, a businessman and politician, died in 1905. She was educated at a number of girls schools, before entering Cheltenham Ladies College in 1905. Her mother supported her decision to study medicine, and Sandford enrolled at the University of Sydney in 1910. She graduated with her M.D. in 1917. Sandford was appointed a resident medical officer at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children in Sydney, and she then became senior medical registrar at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. She travelled to England in 1919 to study ophthalmology at the London hospitals. It was there that she heard about the urgent need for doctors in India to combat eye disease. She worked for a year at the Bhiwani Mission Women's Hospital around 1920, before taking a position in Baghdad at a hospital for women and children. It was in Baghdad, that she met British Army Officer Harry Morgan, and they were married in 1921. She worked in private practice in Baghdad until their daughter, Rosemary was born in 1922. The Sandford-Morgans returned to Australia in 1923, and Dr Sandford-Morgan worked mainly in private practice, or for the Public Health Service in Hobart and Sydney. Their son, Gavin was born in 1925. Captain Morgan and Dr Sandford-Morgan separated, and she moved to Adelaide with their children around 1937. She was a director and developer of a Mothercraft training school. At a meeting of the Australian Federation of University Women in 1938, comments she made about women graduates and motherhood, made the national newspapers. Sandford-Morgan assisted the Royal Australian Air Force Medical Service during World War II. She was appointed to a parliamentary commission investigating health services in South Australia at the close of the war. She wished to take up a position in Europe, and accepted a role as a medical officer at the Commonwealth Immigration camp in New South Wales. However, the transfer that was offered with this role to a European practice, was denied her as a woman. She resigned and sought employment on her own.
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"Murder of Joy Morgan Joy Morgan (12 February 1998 – c. 26 December 2018) was a British university student who was murdered by a fellow member of her church. Morgan was reported as last seen on the 26 December 2018 at her local church in East London at a Feast Celebration, but was not officially reported as missing to the Metropolitan Police Service until the 7 February 2019. Shohfah-El Israel, who attended the same church as Morgan, was found guilty of her murder on the 5 August 2019. Morgan's body was later discovered, despite Israel's refusal to reveal its location. Joy Morgan was born on 12 February 1998 and lived in South London with her family in her early childhood, Morgan's family struggled financially whilst she was growing up. Morgan's mother, Carol, often worked 12-15 hour shifts as a care worker. Morgan's uncle died of cancer in 2006 and later in 2012, her stepfather had also died of the same disease. In 2014, Morgan's father committed suicide. Some time after, Morgan began studying midwifery at the University of Hertfordshire. Shortly after the death of Morgan's father, she started to become interested in the church organisation Israel United in Christ after coming across it on the internet. It was reported that after joining the church it became a big part of Morgan's life and she started to distance herself from her biological family. Two weeks before her disappearance, Morgan described the church in a video posted on the church's social media as \"like the best family that I've ever had\". In January 2016, Morgan joined the UK branch of the organisation, which is based in Ilford, London. Her family reported that their relationship with Morgan became increasingly distant due to the teachings of the church she was now attending. Morgan started to target and mistreat her younger [biracial] siblings, referring to them as \"demons of white-men\". The church is also reported to have a very particular and clear social hierarchy, with women at the church having no ranks and being referred to as 'sisters'. Women at the church are also required to call all men 'sir'. Morgan was heavily invested in the church. Lead Prosecutor, Mark Fenhalls, stated that Morgan \"was a mainstay of the congregation, worshiping regularly and helping run the children's group\".",
"T. J. Morgan Thomas John Morgan (22 April 1907 – 9 December 1986), better known as T. J. Morgan, was a Welsh academic. He was born at \"Ynys-y-mwn\", in the village of Glais, near Swansea, and he studied Welsh at Swansea University. In 1926, he met his future wife, Huana Rees, at the National Eisteddfod of Wales. The couple wed in 1935. They had two sons: the politician Rhodri Morgan (1939–2017) and historian Prys Morgan (b. 1937). A Welsh speaker, he was not a nationalist and opposed Saunders Lewis. \"Y Treigladau a'u Cystrawen\", published in 1952, is generally considered his most important academic work. Morgan was Professor of Welsh at Swansea University from 1961 to 1975. He died suddenly at home in Bishopston, Gower, and was buried at Coed Gwilym cemetery in Swansea.",
"Sandford baronets The Sandford Baronetcy, of Howgill in the County of London, was a title in the Baronetage of England. It was created on 11 August 1641 for Thomas Sandford, subsequently Member of Parliament for Cockermouth. The second Baronet was murdered on 8 September 1675, the same day his son Richard, the third Baronet, was born. The third Baronet later represented Westmorland, Morpeth and Appleby in Parliament. The title became extinct on his death in 1723.",
"Sir James Morgan, 4th Baronet Sir James Morgan, 4th Baronet of Llantarnam (1643 – 30 April 1718) was the younger son of Sir Edward Morgan, 1st Baronet. Morgan was born at Llantarnam Abbey, Llanvihangel Llantarnam, Monmouthshire, Wales. His first wife, Alice (or Anne), was the daughter of a Judge Hopton and the widow of Nicholas Jones. Upon the death of his nephew, Sir Edward, Morgan inherited the baronetcy but not his nephew's estate. His nephew considered him \"a violent zealot\" for the Church of Rome and was careful to prevent Morgan's succeeding to the estate; it went to Sir Edward's daughter Frances (Morgan) Bray. Morgan was the last to hold the baronetcy, as his surviving heirs migrated to the Thirteen Colonies. He died in Wales.",
"Jim Morgan (Canadian politician) James Charles Morgan (October 31, 1939 – August 4, 2019) was a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Bonavista South in the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly from 1972 to 1989. He was a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labrador. The son of Samuel Robert and Helen Morgan, he was born at St. John's and was educated at Memorial University, at Devry Technical School in Toronto and at Sir George Williams University in Montreal. In 1967, Morgan married Denise Philippe. Morgan was elected to the Newfoundland assembly in 1972. He served in the provincial cabinet as Minister of Transportation and Communications, as Minister of Tourism, as Minister of Forestry and Agriculture and as Minister of Fisheries. He was a candidate for the Progressive Conservative party leadership in 1979 but withdrew, transferring his support to Brian Peckford. In 1988, he made an unsuccessful bid to be the federal Progressive Conservative candidate in the riding of St. John's East but Ross Reid was chosen instead. Morgan died in St. John's on August 4, 2019, at the age of 79.",
"Sir Walter Morgan, 1st Baronet Sir Walter Vaughan Morgan, 1st Baronet (3 May 1831 – 12 November 1916), was a British businessman and the 578th Lord Mayor of London. He was the sixth son of Thomas Morgan of Pipton, near Glasbury, Breconshire and his wife Elizabeth Vaughan. He served as Sheriff of London for 1900-01 and as Lord Mayor of London for 1905–05. In 1906 he was created a Baronet, of Whitehall Court in the City of Westminster. His youngest brother Octavius Vaughan Morgan, FSA (1837–96) was a Liberal MP for Battersea from 1885 until 1892.",
"John Morgan (footballer, born 1855) John Richard Morgan (1854 – 11 April 1937) was a Welsh international footballer who earned ten caps between 1877 and 1883. Born at Llansamlet, near Swansea, Glamorgan, where his father, the Rev. Morgan Rice Morgan, was Vicar. He was educated at Oundle School and St John's School, Leatherhead, and from 1874 to 1878 studied at Jesus College, Cambridge. where he was awarded in 1877 a Blue for Association Football. He was Assistant Master at Park House School, Reading; Derby School, 1879–1883; and Somersetshire College, Bath. In 1885 he founded with his wife, Katherine Emily Bennett (1887-1942), Connaught House Preparatory School in Weymouth, Dorset. He retired in 1920 and died on 11 April 1937 at 13, Somerset Place, Bath, and was buried at Lansdown Cemetery, Bath, Somerset.",
"Alfred Morgan (painter) Alfred Morgan (1836 - 1924) was a British painter. His three children also became artists. Several of Morgan's artworks are at the Victoria and Albert Museum including framed paintings as well as murals decorating the museum's architecture. Morgan painted a portrait of Inigo Jones that was the basis for a mosaic at what was then the South Kensington Museum, one of 35 mosaic depictions of famous artists at the museum's South Court. Several of his works were part of the International Health Exhibition of 1884. Morgan studied at South Kensington School of Art. He exhibited at the Royal Academy and produced still lifes, genre pictures, portraits, landscape paintings, paintings of historical and scriptural subjects, and murals such as a lunette painting at the South Kennsington Museum. His sons were Alfred Kedington Morgan (23 July 1868 - 14 April 1828), Owen Baxter Morgan (9 April 1873 - 29 August 1920) and daughter Ethel Mahala Morgan (5 September 1875-22 December 1926). His eldest was a master at Rugby School and married fellow artist Gertrude Ellen Hayes.",
" Her other grandfather was Pennsylvania Congressman George A. Castor. She was married to Thomas Francis Bayard III (1902–1983), the son of Delaware Senator Thomas F. Bayard Jr. from 1928 to their divorce in 1944 and had two children. Morgan and Castor married on April 4, 1949, in London, and remained married to Morgan's death. Castor died 1994 in Lucerne, Switzerland. Morgan first retired to Majorca, Spain, and later Barcelona, Spain, where he died July 8, 1983.",
"James Sandford James Sandford may refer to:"
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"31 December 1905"
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Who was born later, Alexander Gingsjö or Tate Armstrong?
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Alexander Gingsjö Alexander Gingsjö (born 23 December 1980) is a Swedish road cyclist. He competed at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships.
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"Aru Tateno Aru Tateno (; born August 29, 1997) is a Japanese ice dancer. With his former skating partner, Rikako Fukase, he has competed in the final segment at three ISU Championships. The duo placed 19th at the 2016 World Junior Championships in Debrecen, Hungary; 13th at the 2017 World Junior Championships in Taipei, Taiwan; and 11th at the 2018 Four Continents Championships in Taipei. He currently skates with Kiria Hirayama. \"CS: Challenger Series; JGP: Junior Grand Prix\"",
"Patrick Armstrong Patrick Armstrong may refer to:",
"Thomas N. Armstrong III Thomas N. Armstrong III (July 30, 1932, Portsmouth, Virginia – June 20, 2011, Manhattan) was an American museum curator who was director emeritus of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum (1968–1971), the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (1971–1974), the Whitney Museum of American Art (1974–1990) and the Andy Warhol Museum (1993–1995). He is best known for more than quadrupling the size of the Whitney Museum's art holdings. He graduated from Cornell University with a bachelor's degree in art history in 1954, where he became a member of the Quill and Dagger society. He studied museum administration at the New York University Institute of Fine Arts in 1967. Armstrong had a lifelong interest in gardening and joined the board of the Garden Conservancy in 1991, becoming Chairman in 1997. He also served on the advisory committees of Mount Vernon Estate and Gardens and Winterthur Museum & Country Estate, and was an Honorary Trustee of the National Building Museum and a Trustee of the New York School of Interior Design. His book, \"A Singular Vision,\" on the design of his glass house on Fishers Island, New York, was published by WW Norton in the fall of 2011.",
"Eddie Shin Edward Andrew Yoon Beom \"Eddie\" Shin (born July 17, 1976) is an American actor. He played Dave Mendoza in the Netflix series \"Alexa & Katie\", and portrays characters named Agent Mike Li in the 2015 first season of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) television series \"Agent Carter\" and the 2018 feature film \"Peppermint\". Shin graduated from the University of Chicago. He played Stanley Mao in \"ER\". and Henry Cho in \"Gilmore Girls\". His guest television appearances include \"NYPD Blue\", \"Malcolm in the Middle\", \"NCIS\", \"Two and a Half Men\", \"2 Broke Girls\", \"Castle\", \"The Middle\" and \"The Big Bang Theory\". He voiced Taka in \"Ghost of Tsushima\".",
"Harold Hunter Armstrong Harold Hunter Armstrong (9 April 1884 – 11 July 1979) was an American author. He also wrote under the name Henry G. Aikman.",
"Somphote Ahunai Somphote Ahunai is a Thai billionaire. He made his fortune from his founding of the renewable energy firm Energy Absolute. He has overseen the expansion of the firm into the electric car (Mine Mobility) and a gigafactory. He graduated from the Joseph M. Katz Graduate School of Business, and began his career in security trading. He resides primarily in Bangkok. His firm has been likened to the \"Tesla of Asia.\"",
"Andrew Tate Emory Andrew Tate III (born December 1, 1986) is a British-American kickboxer, commentator and businessman. As a kickboxer, Tate is a 3-time ISKA world champion and Enfusion champion. Born in Washington, DC, he fought out of Luton, England, until his retirement. Tate made his return in February 2020 at KO Masters 7 in Bucharest, Romania, where he currently resides. Tate is also known for his controversial views on women. After defeating former super cruiserweight British champions Ollie Green and Mo Karbo, Tate faced Paul Randle for the vacant International Sport Karate Association (ISKA) English Light Cruiserweight title. On April 25, 2009, Tate beat Randle in the fifth round of their bout in Derby, England, winning his first ever belt and title. Tate later scored a few more victories and won the International Kickboxing Federation (IKF) British Cruiserweight title against Daniel Hughes with a first-round KO in 2009. On March 19, 2011, he fought his first world title match in France. Tate lost the fight for the vacant ISKA World Full-Contact Light Heavyweight Championship to Jean-Luc Benoit on points after 12 rounds. They had a rematch three months later in Luton, England, but this time Tate became champion, defeating Benoit via KO in round 8 of the scheduled 12 rounds. Tate lost his It's Showtime 85MAX title against Sahak Parparyan on May 12, 2012, in Kortrijk, Belgium, on points. On December 2, 2012, Tate participated in Enfusion 3: Trial of the Gladiators to determine the world's No. 1 kickboxer in the 85 kg category. He qualified for the tournament in August 2011 in Ohrid, Macedonia, stopping Sammy Masa by second-round KO and Adnan Omeragić by first-round KO. He scored a victory in the semi-finals, knocking out Ritchie Hocking with punches in the first round, but lost in the final via a first-round flying knee KO from Franci Grajš, who fought in the semi-final against Sahak Parparyan. Tate avenged a 2011 loss to Vincent Petitjean and won his second ISKA world title in 12 rounds of two minutes.",
"Richard Gingras Richard Gingras is an American Internet executive and entrepreneur who has focused on emerging digital media since 1979, including efforts at Google, Apple Computer, Salon Media Group and the Public Broadcasting Service. He has been an outspoken proponent for journalistic innovation on the Internet. Gingras is currently vice president of news at Google. In May 2018 he warned against building the future of news based on a misunderstanding of the past. He was a key instigator in creating the Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) project which is an open-source effort to improve the speed of the World Wide Web and improve advertising user experience. In late 2014, he co-founded the Trust Project with Sally Lehrman of the Markulla Center for Ethics at Santa Clara University. The Trust Project is a global effort of the journalism community to explore how the architecture of journalism can be enhanced to improve the perceived credibility of high-quality journalism. Until July 2011, Gingras was CEO of Salon Media Group which operates the news site Salon.com and the pioneering virtual community The WELL. He has had a long association with Salon having assembled its initial seed financing in 1995. During 2007 and 2008, he served as a strategic advisor to the executive team at Google focusing on strategies relating to the evolution of news and television. In 2002, he co-founded Goodmail Systems and served as its CEO and chairman. Goodmail Systems developed certified email services offered through large email providers including Yahoo and America Online. He also served as interim president of MyPublisher from 2000-2001 and guided the design of a custom hardcover photo book service introduced by Apple Computer as part of iPhoto. From early 1996 to mid 2000, he led online service efforts at Excite@Home as Senior Vice President and General Manager of the company's consumer-focused product division, Excite Studios which included the Excite search engine. In January 1996, he joined the early consumer broadband network @Home Network, as vice president of programming and editor-in-chief where he was responsible for the launch of @Home's broadband-enabled online portal. @Home was founded by the venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins in partnership with major US cable companies to offer high-speed Internet access. In mid 2000 @Home merged with Excite and Gingras became head of both the Excite and @Home portals. At Apple Computer in the early 1990s he led the development of the online service eWorld.",
"Allen Tate (musician) Allen Tate (born June 9, 1989) is an American vocalist, record producer, and songwriter based in Brooklyn, New York. Since 2012, he has been a singer of San Fermin, the indie-rock band led by composer Ellis Ludwig-Leone. As a producer, he has collaborated with artists including San Fermin, Wild Pink, The Districts, Daisy the Great, and Hypoluxo among others. In 2020, he and Ludwig-Leone co-founded their label Better Company Records, a joint venture with The Orchard. Tate's debut solo project, \"Sleepwalker\", co-produced by Ludwig-Leone, was released on October 28, 2016. His sophomore record \"In the Waves\", co-produced by John Agnello, was released on May 3, 2019. Tate attended school at the Germantown Academy, a non-sectarian college prep school located in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. Tate attended New York University where he studied philosophy, and planned to pursue a law career. At age 15, Tate attended the Berklee College of Music summer program during high school, where he would meet collaborator Ellis Ludwig-Leone. Tate and Ludwig-Leone came together to create San Fermin's self-titled debut album, with Tate serving as the lead vocalist. \"San Fermin\" arrived on September 17, 2013, with many reviews complimenting Tate's baritone-voice. Tate has since contributed to the band's follow-up projects including \"Jackrabbit\" (2014), \"Belong\" (2017), \"Live at the Fillmore\" (2019) and \"The Cormorant I & II\" (2020). In the fall of 2014, during a 3-week stay in Copenhagen, Tate began working on his first solo project. With \"Sleepwalker\", the aforementioned project, Tate attempted to convey feelings of loneliness and anxiety, describing his goal as a \"menacing bath: warm and enveloping, but with an element of anxiety.\" For the recording of the project, Tate recruited Ludwig-Leone and other San Fermin bandmates Michael Hanf (drums) and Tyler McDiarmid (guitar) in order to work during breaks in the San Fermin tour schedule. The album was then mixed by Matty Green (TV on the Radio, Yeasayer, Wild Belle) and released on October 28, 2016.",
"Eddie Glass Eddie Glass (born December 19, 1970) is an American rock musician best known for his work with punk band Olivelawn, and stoner rock bands Nebula, and Fu Manchu. Nebula has been Glass' primary musical group since 1997, when he and drummer Ruben Romano acrimoniously split from Fu Manchu. Though currently known as a guitarist, Eddie Glass first gained fame as the drummer in California punk band Olivelawn. Glass is the founder, lead guitarist, vocalist, and primary songwriter for Nebula, and previously acted in a similar capacity (minus the vocal duties) in Fu Manchu. Some of his songs have been featured in films, skateboard videos, and video games such as Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4, and THUG2. Glass started playing with Hagop Najarian and Neil Blender in the mid 1980s as teenagers in southern California, and the trio formed Worked World. Worked World self-released one 7\" e.p. Some of these songs were featured in early skateboarding videos."
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"Alexander Gingsjö"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Les Branchés À Saint-Tropez?
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Les Branchés à Saint-Tropez Les Branchés à Saint-Tropez («" The Fashioned in Saint- Tropez" ») (1983) is a French B movie by Max Pécas. It was a very big success when it came out in the theaters. It is the first part of Max Pécas's "Saint-Tropez" trilogy, the two other movies being: "Deux enfoirés à Saint-Tropez" and "On se calme et on boit frais à Saint-Tropez".
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"Mathieu Riboulet Mathieu Riboulet (13 June 1960 – 5 February 2018) was a French writer and film director. The son of architect , Mathieu Riboulet studied cinema and modern letters at the . He made several self-produced films within the framework of the \"Spy Films\" company established in the 1980s before devoting himself to writing. The main characters of \"Quelqu'un s'approche\", of the novels \"Le Corps des anges\" and \"L'Amant des morts\" are young men attracted by men. In November 2012, his novel \"\" was awarded the prix Décembre. In 2013, Riboulet became a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He died from cancer on 5 February 2018. Mathieu Riboulet was awarded several prizes:",
"Claude Mulot Claude Mulot (1942–1986) was a French screenwriter and film director who mainly specialized in adult films but also made various attempts in other genres like horror films (\"The Blood Rose\"), comedies (\"Le jour se lève et les conneries commencent\") or thrillers (\"Le Couteau sous la gorge\"). He accidentally drowned at the early age of 44 while his screenplay \"On se calme et on boit frais à Saint-Tropez\" was being shot by Max Pécas in Saint-Tropez in 1986.",
"Jean-Louis Bertuccelli Jean-Louis Bertuccelli (3 June 1942 – 6 March 2014) was a French film director and screenwriter. He died in March 2014 at age of 71.",
"Thierry Jonquet Thierry Jonquet (; January 19, 1954 – August 9, 2009) was a French writer who specialised in crime novels with political themes. He was born in Paris; his most recent and best known novel outside France was \"Mygale\" (1984), then published in the US in 2003 by City Lights. Mygale was also published in the UK as \"Tarantula\" in 2005 (Serpent's Tail). He wrote over 20 novels in French, including \"Le bal des débris\", \"Moloch\" and \"Rouge c'est la vie\". Jonquet died aged 55 in hospital in Paris. \"Tarantula\" was filmed by Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, under the title \"The Skin I Live In\", which was entered in competition in May 2011 for the Cannes Film Festival.",
"Patrick Bricard Patrick Bricard (26 April 1940 – 26 January 2019) was a French actor and director. Bricard appeared in numerous movies and television shows. In 1964, he played a small role in the film \"The Umbrellas of Cherbourg\". In 1968, Bricard played the role of Marcel in the TV movie \"L'Homme du Picardie\". Before he reached his break-out, Bricard had another small role in the film \"Le Distrait.\" He achieved fame in the television series \"L'Île aux enfants\" (1974-1982). Other notable television appearances include \"Le Village dans les nuages\" (1982-1986) and \"La Dernière Séance\". After 1986, Bricard mainly devoted himself to theatre, directing plays such as \"Poil de carotte\", \"The Little Prince\", \"Letters from My Windmill\", \"Scapin the Schemer\", \"The Miser\", and \"Le Médecin malgré lui\". Bricard died on 26 January 2019.",
"Max Pécas Max Pécas (25 April 1925 in Lyon – 10 February 2003 in Paris) was a French filmmaker, writer and producer. Pécas was assistant director to Jacques Daroy and others from 1948 to 1957. After making erotic movies and thrillers through the 1960s and 1970s, he shot several teen comedies, including the popular three-film \"Saint-Tropez\" series. Many of his films are considered camp B-movies. Some of Pécas's softcore films were imported to the U.S. by Radley Metzger.",
"Jean-Paul Le Chanois Jean-Paul Étienne Dreyfus, better known as Jean-Paul Le Chanois (25 October 1909 – 8 July 1985), was a French film director, screenwriter and actor. His film \"...Sans laisser d'adresse\" won the Golden Bear (Comedies) award at the 1st Berlin International Film Festival.",
"Pierre Billon (director) Pierre Billon (born Saint-Hippolyte-du-Fort, 7 February 1901 – died Paris, 31 August 1981) was a French film director and screenwriter. In 1952 he served on the jury of the Cannes Festival.",
"Thierry Zéno Thierry Zéno (born Thierry Jonard; 22 April 1950 – 7 June 2017) was a Belgian author-filmmaker. His films include the controversial \"Vase de Noces\" (1974), and a documentary \"¡Ya basta! Le cri des sans-visage\" (1995–1997) on the Zapatista rebels of Chiapas, Mexico. His fascination with artists is reflected in his works \"Les muses sataniques\" (1983), \"Ce tant bizarre Monsieur Rops\" (2000) and \"Eugène Ionesco, voix et silences\" (1987). Zéno created a \"video\" department at the Académie de Dessin et des Arts décoratifs de Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, where he was a teacher from 1985 to 1999, and was the director beginning in 1999. He died on 7 June 2017.",
"François Truffaut François Roland Truffaut ( , ; ; 6 February 1932 – 21 October 1984) was a French film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and film critic. He is widely regarded as one of the founders of the French New Wave. After a career of more than 25 years, he remains an icon of the French film industry, having worked on over 25 films. Truffaut's film \"The 400 Blows\" is a defining film of the French New Wave movement, and has four sequels, \"Antoine et Colette\", \"Stolen Kisses\", \"Bed and Board\", and \"Love on the Run\", made between 1958 and 1979. Truffaut's 1973 film \"Day for Night\" earned him critical acclaim and several awards, including the BAFTA Award for Best Film and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. His other notable films include \"Shoot the Piano Player\" (1960), \"Jules and Jim\" (1962), \"The Soft Skin\" (1964), \"The Wild Child\" (1970), \"Two English Girls\" (1971), \"The Last Metro\" (1980), and \"The Woman Next Door\" (1981). He is also known for his supporting role in the film \"Close Encounters of the Third Kind\" (1977). Truffaut also wrote the notable book \"Hitchcock/Truffaut\" (1966), which detailed his interviews with the film director Alfred Hitchcock during the 1960s. Truffaut was born in Paris on 6 February 1932. His mother was Janine de Montferrand. His mother's future husband, Roland Truffaut, accepted him as an adopted son and gave him his surname. He was passed around to live with various nannies and his grandmother for a number of years. His grandmother instilled in him her love of books and music. He lived with her until her death, when Truffaut was eight years old. It was only after her death that he lived with his parents. Truffaut's biological father's identity is unknown, but a private detective agency in 1968 revealed that its inquiry into the matter led to a Roland Levy, a Jewish dentist from Bayonne. Truffaut's mother's family disputed the finding but Truffaut believed and embraced it."
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"10 February 2003"
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What is the date of birth of the director of film The Half-Naked Truth?
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The Half-Naked Truth The Half-Naked Truth is a 1932 American pre-Code comedy film directed by Gregory La Cava and featuring Lee Tracy as a carnival pitchman who finagles his girlfriend, a fiery hoochie dancer played by Lupe Vélez, into a major Broadway revue under the auspices of an impresario portrayed by Frank Morgan. The film was released on December 16, 1932, by RKO Radio Pictures. Fast-talking Jimmy Bates (Lee Tracy) takes over as publicity agent for a struggling carnival owned by Colonel Munday. His latest scheme to bring in customers involves promising to reveal the identity of the father (allegedly one of the local town's residents) of his hot-tempered girlfriend, "hootch dancer" Teresita (Lupe Vélez), at that night's performance. However, when the local sheriff learns that it is all a con, Bates, his friend Achilles and Teresita have to flee. They head to New York City. Bates has always bragged about his close friendship with powerful theater impresario Merle Farrell. Bates promises to make Teresita a star, but it soon becomes clear that Farrell has never heard of him. Undaunted, Bates promotes Teresita as "Princess Exotica", an escapee from a Turkish harem, complete with a eunuch servant (Achilles) and a lion. Bates informs the reporters that she will be starring in Farrell's show. At first, Farrell is outraged, but when he hears about the sharp increase in ticket sales, he signs Teresita to a contract. Farrell insists, however, that she perform a slow Middle Eastern-style dance, which bores the audience. Bates rushes onstage and has her drop her pretense and sing a modern song. This proves to be a hit, and Teresita becomes a star, while Bates becomes Farrell's new publicity manager. However, while Bates is away on a business trip, she starts seeing the married Farrell. When Bates finds out, he quits and promises to make the first girl he sees into a bigger sensation to eclipse his treacherous girlfriend. That turns out to be blond hotel maid Gladys (Shirley Chambers), whom Achilles is trying to romance. Bates has Gladys pretend to be "Eve", the leader of a group of nudists. He blackmails Farrell (with a compromising photograph of him and Teresita) into signing Eve to his show.
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"Naked Hollywood Naked Hollywood is a 6 part TV series directed by Margy Kinmonth. The film includes Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Caan, Barry Diller, Joe Roth, Sydney Pollack, Oliver Stone, James Brooks, Nora Ephron, Terry Gilliam and many more. The film won a British Academy Film Award for Best Factual Series. Publicity-shy to the point of paranoia, the talent agencies are Hollywood's Masonic lodges, secret brotherhoods wielding power behind the scenes. As the movie business booms, competition for clients is intense. The series watches talent spotters and agents in action as they make deals, poach each other's clients, and groom the stars of tomorrow.",
"Half a Life (film) Half a Life () is a 1982 film directed by Romain Goupil, which won the Caméra d'Or and Award of the Youth (French film) at the Cannes Film Festival, and the César Award for Best Debut. The film is a biographical black and white documentary about Michel Recanati, a militant leader during the May 1968 riots in Paris. It tells the story of two friends through the left-wing groups in Paris between 1966 and 1978 when Michel goes missing and it is later discovered that he committed suicide. It is a personal tale as well as an in-depth look at the political scene in France during those years. It also documents the history of the [Highschool Student Action Committee] and the LCR Revolutionary Communist League . Much of the original footage filmed over 10 years before the 1982 movie documentary was also filmed by Goupil. His father Pierre worked in the cinema and Romain armed with a super 8 camera took some footage of the student riots and meetings from that time in Paris. There is footage of speeches by Alain Krivine a leader of the Trotskyist movement in France and a member of the Revolutionary Communist League known by the acronym LCR Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire . Other key figures of the French Left are interviewed at various points in the documentary. They include Trotskyst journalist , also Henri Weber when he was a leading member of the Trotskyist Revolutionary Communist Youth known in French as: (JCR) and also a member of Revolutionary Communist League (LCR)",
"Dominic Savage Dominic Savage (born 23 November 1962 in Margate, Kent, England) is a BAFTA-award-winning British director, writer, and actor. Originally a child actor — making several television appearances and featuring in Stanley Kubrick's \"Barry Lyndon\" (1975) — Savage moved into writing and directing in his mid-thirties, going on to win BAFTAs for \"Nice Girl\" (2000) and \"When I Was 12\" (2001). He is also well known for his 2009 film, a BBC2 TV drama entitled \"Freefall\".",
"James Schamus James Allan Schamus (born September 7, 1959) is an American screenwriter, producer, business executive, film historian, professor, and director. He is a frequent collaborator of Ang Lee, the co-founder of the production company Good Machine, and the former CEO of motion picture production, financing, and worldwide distribution company Focus Features, a subsidiary of NBCUniversal. Schamus was born in Detroit, Michigan, to a Jewish family. He is the son of Clarita (Gershowitz) Karlin and Julian John Schamus, and was raised in Los Angeles. He is married to writer Nancy Kricorian, with whom he has two children. His output includes writing or co-writing \"The Ice Storm\", \"Eat, Drink, Man, Woman\", \"Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon\" and \"Hulk\" (all directed by Ang Lee), and producing \"Brokeback Mountain\" and \"Alone in Berlin\". At Focus he oversaw the production and distribution of \"Lost in Translation\", \"Milk\", \"Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind\", \"Coraline\", and \"The Kids Are All Right\". He is Professor of Professional Practice in Columbia University's School of the Arts, where he teaches film history and theory. He has also taught at Yale University and at Rutgers University. He is the author of \"Carl Theodor Dreyer's Gertrud: The Moving Word\", published by the University of Washington Press. He earned his BA, MA, and Ph.D. in English from University of California, Berkeley. Schamus made his feature directorial debut with \"Indignation\", an adaptation of Philip Roth's novel of the same name. Schamus also wrote the script for the film, which stars Logan Lerman, Sarah Gadon, and Tracy Letts, and is the story of a Jewish student at an Ohio college in 1951. The film premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, and was theatrically released by Roadside Attractions on July 29, 2016. Schamus participates as a member of the Jury for the NYICFF, a local New York City Film Festival dedicated to screening films for children between the ages of 3 and 18. He was president of the jury for the 64th Berlin International Film Festival. Schamus founded Symbolic Exchange, a film development company based in New York City.",
"Stephen Frears Stephen Arthur Frears (born 20 June 1941) is an English director and producer of film and television often depicting real life stories as well as projects that explore social class through sharply drawn characters. Born in Leicester and educated at Gresham's School and Trinity College, Cambridge, Frears started his career working as an assistant director in theatre and film while directing numerous television plays. In 1971, he directed his first feature film, \"Gumshoe\". After more television work, he won acclaim for the gay romance film, \"My Beautiful Laundrette\" (1985), featuring a breakout performance from a young Daniel Day-Lewis. He continued to garner praise with \"Prick Up Your Ears\" (1987), a biographical movie about British playwright Joe Orton. He followed with the American films \"Dangerous Liaisons\" (1988) and \"The Grifters\" (1990), the latter receiving a nomination for Best Director. In 2000, Frears adaptated Nick Hornby's novel, \"High Fidelity,\" into a feature film with John Cusack, whom he had previously directed in \"The Grifters\". In 2002, he directed the drama \"Dirty Pretty Things\" with Audrey Tautou and Chiwetel Ejiofor, which addressed the exploitation of illegal immigrant workers in London. In 2006, Frears directed \"The Queen\", that focused on the reaction to the tragic death of Princess Diana in 1997. The film received its debut at the Venice International Film Festival to critical acclaim, with Helen Mirren eventually winning many awards for playing the title role, and Frears himself received his second Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Frears continued to work with exceptional talents such as Judi Dench in the drama \"Philomena\" (2013), based on the true story of a woman searching for a child she gave up for adoption in her youth; and Meryl Streep in \"Florence Foster Jenkins\" (2016), as a delusional socialite who embarks upon a career as opera singer despite a manifest lack of vocal talent. He also reunited with Dench in \"Victoria and Abdul\" (2017), a film about the unlikely friendship between the aging Queen Victoria and her young Indian servant, Abdul Karim.",
"Hal Hartley Hal Hartley (born November 3, 1959) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer and composer who became a key figure in the American independent film movement of the 1980s and '90s. He is best known for his films \"The Unbelievable Truth\", \"Trust\", \"Simple Men\", \"Amateur\" and \"Henry Fool\", which are notable for deadpan humour and offbeat characters quoting philosophical dialogue. His films provided a career launch for a number of actors, including Adrienne Shelly, Edie Falco, James Urbaniak, Martin Donovan, Karen Sillas and Elina Löwensohn. Hartley frequently scores his own films using his pseudonym Ned Rifle, and his soundtracks regularly feature music by indie rock acts Sonic Youth, Yo La Tengo and PJ Harvey. Hartley was born in Lindenhurst on southern Long Island, New York, the son of an ironworker. Hartley had an early interest in painting and attended the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston where he studied art and developed an interest in filmmaking. In 1980, he was accepted to the filmmaking program at the State University of New York at Purchase in New York, where he met a core group of technicians and actors who would go on to work with him on his feature films, including his regular cinematographer Michael Spiller. Hartley shot his first feature film, \"The Unbelievable Truth\", in 1988. Made on a shoestring budget and filmed in his native Long Island, it was an unconventional love story about a suburban Long Island teenager (played by Adrienne Shelly, a soon-to-be Hartley regular) falling in love with a handsome mechanic with a criminal past (Robert John Burke, also a soon-to-be Hartley regular). The screenplay featured what have become Hartley's trademarks – deadpan humour, offbeat, stilted, pause-filled dialogue, and characters posing philosophical questions about the meaning of life, combined with a degree of stylization in acting, choreography and camera movement. The film received positive reviews and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1990 Sundance Film Festival, establishing Hartley as a distinctive new talent in the burgeoning independent filmmaking movement.",
"Mario Zampi Mario Zampi (1 November 19032 December 1963) was an Italian film producer and director. A co-founder of Two Cities Films, a British production company, he is most closely associated with British comedies of the 1950s. Zampi began his career as an actor in Italy at the age of 17. By 1930, he was working for Warner Bros. as a film editor in London. In 1937, he and compatriot Filippo Del Giudice founded Two Cities Films. While the company was noted for such serious films as \"In Which We Serve\", \"Henry V\", and \"Hamlet\", Zampi is most remembered for comedies. He made his mark with such films as \"Laughter in Paradise\" (1951), \"The Naked Truth\" (1957), and \"Too Many Crooks\" (1959), often in the dual role of director and producer. Director and producer unless otherwise indicated.",
"The Naked Earth The Naked Earth is a 1958 British-American drama film directed by Vincent Sherman and written by Milton Holmes and Harold Buchman. The film stars Richard Todd, Juliette Gréco, John Kitzmiller, Finlay Currie, Laurence Naismith and Christopher Rhodes. The film was released on February 4, 1958, by 20th Century Fox. The action takes place at the end of the nineteenth century, in East Africa. Danny Halloran, a Briton, comes to find a friend tobacco farmer but fails to do so. He discovers that the farmer died leaving a widow, Maria. Danny falls in love with the young woman and decides to marry her and take over the plantation. When the harvest fails, he goes hunting for crocodiles to trade their skins.",
"Samuel Fuller Samuel Michael Fuller (August 12, 1912 – October 30, 1997) was an American film director, screenwriter, novelist, journalist, and World War II veteran known for directing low-budget genre movies with controversial themes, often made outside the conventional studio system. Fuller wrote his first screenplay for \"Hats Off\" in 1936, and made his directorial debut with the Western \"I Shot Jesse James\" (1949). He would continue to direct several other Westerns and war thrillers throughout the 1950s. Fuller shifted from Westerns and war movies in the 1960s with his low-budget thriller \"Shock Corridor\" in 1963, followed by the neo-noir \"The Naked Kiss\" (1964). He was inactive in filmmaking for most of the 1970s, before writing and directing the semi-autobiographical war epic \"The Big Red One\" (1980), and the drama \"White Dog\" (1982), whose screenplay he co-wrote with Curtis Hanson. Several of his films would prove influential to French New Wave filmmakers, notably Jean-Luc Godard, who gave him a cameo appearance in \"Pierrot le Fou\" (1965). Samuel Michael Fuller was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, of Jewish parents, Rebecca ( Baum) and Benjamin Fuller. His father died in 1923 when Samuel was 11. After immigrating to the United States, the family's surname was changed from Rabinovitch to Fuller, a name possibly inspired by Samuel Fuller, a doctor who arrived in America on the \"Mayflower\". In his autobiography, \"A Third Face\" (2002), he says that he did not speak until he was five. His first word was \"Hammer!\" After his father's death, the family moved to New York City, where at the age of 12, he began working as a newspaper copyboy. He became a crime reporter in New York City at age 17, working for the \"New York Evening Graphic.\" He broke the story of Jeanne Eagels' death. He wrote pulp novels, including \"The Dark Page\" (1944; reissued in 2007 with an introduction by Wim Wenders), which was later adapted into the 1952 movie \"Scandal Sheet\". During World War II, Fuller joined the United States Army. He was assigned as an infantryman to the 16th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, and saw heavy fighting.",
"The Naked Hills The Naked Hills is a 1956 American Western film directed by Josef Shaftel, starring David Wayne, Keenan Wynn, and James Barton. Tracy Powell, an Indiana farmer, gets the gold fever and heads for Stockton, California in 1849. There, he abandons his first partner, Bert Killian, and teams up with Sam Wilkins, a claim jumper employed by Willis Haver. Six years later, Powell returns to Indiana and his sweetheart, Julie. They marry and he tries farming again but, on the night their son is born, he takes off again searching for gold. This time he heads for the hills with an inveterate prospector, Jimmo McCann. A decade later, the two are still hunting for their big strike when McCann is killed in an accident. Powell returns home with news of a big strike but the deserted Julie will have nothing to do with him. His friend Killian will not believe him but Haver, now a banker gives him a small loan and then beats him out of his claim. Many years pass before he comes home, now sixty years old, and this time, his wife and son open their home to him. But he vows to go prospecting come next spring."
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"March 10, 1892"
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What is the date of birth of the director of film Images Of Liberation?
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Images of Liberation Images of Liberation () is a 1982 Danish drama film directed by Lars von Trier. The film was Trier's graduation film from the National Film School of Denmark. It became the first ever Danish school film to receive regular theatrical distribution. It was screened in the Panorama section of the 34th Berlin International Film Festival. The story is set in Copenhagen during World War II, and follows a German officer who visits his Danish mistress the days after the occupation of Denmark has ended.
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"Jean-Louis Comolli Jean-Louis Comolli (born 30 July 1941) is a French writer, editor, and film director. He was editor in chief of \"Cahiers du cinéma\" from 1966 to 1978, during which period he wrote the influential essays \"Machines of the Visible\" (1971) and \"Technique and Ideology: Camera, Perspective, Depth of Field\" (1971-2), both of which have been translated in English anthologies of film and media studies. This work was important in the discussion on apparatus theory, an attempt to rethink cinema as a site for the production and maintenance of dominant state ideology in the wake of May 1968. After his tenure at \"Cahiers\", Comolli continued his work as a director and has since published numerous works on film theory, documentary, and jazz. He currently teaches film theory at the Universities of Paris VIII, Barcelona, Strasburg and Genève. In the spring of 2008, Comolli was invited to the Visions du réel documentary film festival in Nyon, Switzerland, where he developed his theory of documentary cinema.",
"Sergei Parajanov Sergei Parajanov (; ; ; ; sometimes spelled Paradzhanov or Paradjanov; January 9, 1924 – July 20, 1990) was a Soviet Armenian film director, screenwriter and artist who made seminal contribution to world cinema with his films \"Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors\" and \"The Color of Pomegranates\". Parajanov is regarded by film critics, film historians, and filmmakers to be one of the greatest and most influential filmmakers in cinema history. He invented his own cinematic style, which was out of step with the guiding principles of socialist realism; the only sanctioned art style in the USSR. This, combined with his lifestyle and behaviour, led Soviet authorities to repeatedly persecute and imprison him, and suppress his films. Despite this, Parajanov was named one of the 20 Film Directors of the Future by the Rotterdam International Film Festival, and his films were ranked among the greatest films of all time by the British Film Institute's magazine Sight & Sound. Although he started professional film-making in 1954, Parajanov later disowned all the films he made before 1965 as \"garbage\". After directing \"Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors\" (renamed \"Wild Horses of Fire\" for most foreign distributions) Parajanov became something of an international celebrity and simultaneously a target of attacks from the USSR. Nearly all of his film projects and plans from 1965 to 1973 were banned, scrapped or closed by the Soviet film administrations, both local (in Kyiv and Yerevan) and federal (Goskino), almost without discussion, until he was finally arrested in late 1973 on false charges of rape, homosexuality and bribery. He was imprisoned until 1977, despite pleas for pardon from various artists. Even after his release (he was arrested for the third and last time in 1982) he was a \"persona non grata\" in Soviet cinema. It was not until the mid-1980s, when the political climate started to relax, that he could resume directing. Still, it required the help of influential Georgian actor Dodo Abashidze and other friends to have his last feature films greenlighted. His health seriously weakened after four years in labor camps and nine months in prison in Tbilisi.",
"Heiny Srour Heiny Srour (born March 23, 1945) is a Lebanese film director. She is best known for being the first female Arab filmmaker to have a film, \"Saat El Tahrir Dakkat\" or \"The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived\", chosen for the Cannes Film Festival. Srour advocated for women's rights through her films, her writing, and by funding other filmmakers. Born in 1945 in Beirut, Srour studied sociology at the American University in Beirut and then completed a doctorate in social anthropology at the Sorbonne. Her first film, \"Bread of Our Mountains\" (1968, 3', 16mm) was lost during the Lebanese Civil War. In 1974, her film \"The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived\", about an uprising in Oman, was selected to compete at the Cannes Film Festival, making Srour the first Arab woman to have a film selected for the international festival. It is believed that her documentary film \"The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived\" was actually the first film by any female filmmaker to be screened at the festival. Srour cites Federico Fellini's film \"8½\" as a significant inspiration for the film. However, despite the film’s accolades and success at Cannes, \"The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived\" was banned in most of the Arab world for its socialist and feminist politics. Srour was also vocal about the position of women in Arab society, and in 1978, along with Tunisian director Salma Baccar and Arab cinema historian Magda Wassef, she announced a new assistance fund \"for the self-expression of women in cinema.\" Her 1984 feature film, \"Leila and the Wolves\", also reflects feminist politics. The film charts the story of Leila, a young Lebanese woman from London who travels through time through twentieth-century Lebanon and Palestine. Srour's first feature film, \"Leila and the Wolves\" utilizes the art of documentary with the intricacies of Arabian mythology. Although fictional, she employs a symbolism that parallels an authentic narrative constructed from experience. Archival footage is woven into the composition to strategically emulate the complex, historical narratives. Further, Srour shares a feminist perspective that echoes the colonial past. In a 2019 interview with Mary Jirmanus Saba, Srour shares,\"...when I saw 8 ½, I realized that cinema was a very powerful medium that could express everything I wanted to say.",
"Pierre Falardeau Pierre Falardeau (December 28, 1946 – September 25, 2009) was a Québécois film and documentary director, pamphleteer and noted activist for Quebec independence. Falardeau wrote at least one book, \"Rien n'est plus précieux que la liberté et l'indépendance\". He died on September 25, 2009, following a long battle with cancer. He was entombed at the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery in Montreal. With regard to minorities, Falardeau stated he did not care whether someone was white, black, yellow or green with orange polka dots; those who supported independence he considered brothers and sisters, and those who did not were \"the enemy\". Falardeau created some controversy during his career. For example, in 2006, a photograph surfaced of him at an August 2006 Montreal pro-Palestinian rally about the Israel-Lebanon conflict. The picture shows Falardeau with some young men and his friend and filmmaking partner Julien Poulin holding a Hezbollah flag. When asked to comment, Falardeau responded that he approached the men to understand why they supported Hezbollah, and that the flag belonged to the young men.",
"Michel La Veaux Michel La Veaux (born January 21, 1955 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian cinematographer and documentary filmmaker. He is most noted for his work on the films \"The Dismantling (Le Démantèlement)\", for which he won the Jutra Award for Best Cinematography at the 16th Jutra Awards, and \"The Fireflies Are Gone (La disparition des lucioles)\", for which he won the Borsos Competition award for best cinematography in a Canadian film at the 2018 Whistler Film Festival. La Veaux has also been a Jutra/Iris nominee at the 13th Jutra Awards in 2011 for \"Mourning for Anna (Trois temps après la mort d'Anna)\", at the 14th Jutra Awards in 2012 for \"For the Love of God (Pour l'amour de Dieu)\" and at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards in 2018 for \"Iqaluit\", and a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Canadian Screen Award for Best Cinematography at the 3rd Canadian Screen Awards in 2014 for \"Meetings with a Young Poet\". La Veaux has also directed a number of documentary films, including \"Hôtel La Louisiane\" (2015) and \"Labrecque, une caméra pour la mémoire\" (2016).",
"Christophe Ruggia Christophe Ruggia (born 7 January 1965) is a French film director and screenwriter. Christophe Ruggia is a graduate of the Free Conservatory of French Cinema (\"Conservatoire libre du cinéma français\"), and laureate of the Fondation Marcel Bleustein-Blanchet in 1993. In 1991, he conceived and produced a short film as part of a campaign against HIV/AIDS in the West Indies entitled \"Sovè l'anmou\". After \"L'Enfance Égarée\" (1993), a short film released in theaters in the program Four Urban Legends, he directed (1997), his first feature film, which was nominated to the César Awards. He then directed two other feature films, \"Les Diables\" (2002) and (2011). He became known for his numerous activist commitments, and, according to \"Libération\", he was several times co-president or vice-president between 2003 and June 2019 of the (SRF, \"Society of Film Directors\"). He was co-chair for 2014-2015. According to \"Libération\" in 2003, \"he played a preponderant role in the coordination of the struggle\" of recurring status entertainment workers. In 2005, shortly before the conviction of director Jean-Claude Brisseau for sexual harassment, he was one of the signatories of a petition in support of the latter launched by \"Les Inrockuptibles\". This petition denounces \"the way in which certain media have reported on the trial against him\". In 2015, he launched with other filmmakers \"The Call of Calais\", which denounces a disengagement of the French government from the problem of the Calais Jungle, where thousands of migrants lived in miserable conditions. He is the initiator of a support movement in France for the Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov, an opponent of the annexation of Crimea, who was sentenced by Russia in 2015 to twenty years in prison for \"acts of terrorism\" and \"arms trafficking\" during a trial described as \"Stalinist\" by Amnesty International. When the Ukrainian filmmaker did not eat for three months, Ruggia launched in September 2018 with a collective of filmmakers a rotating hunger strike that he organized in front of the Russian embassy in Paris.",
"Liberation (film series) Liberation (, translit. Osvobozhdenie, , ) is a film series released in 1970 and 1971, directed by Yuri Ozerov and shot in wide-format NIKFI process (70 mm). The script was written by Yuri Bondarev and Oscar Kurganov. The series was a Soviet-Polish-East German-Italian-Yugoslav co-production. The films are a dramatized account of the liberation of the Soviet Union's territory and the subsequent defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War, focusing on five major Eastern Front campaigns: the Battle of Kursk, the Lower Dnieper Offensive, Operation Bagration, the Vistula–Oder Offensive, and the Battle of Berlin. After the Soviets are alerted to the imminent German offensive in Kursk, they launch a preemptive artillery strike, delaying the enemy. The battalion of Lieutenant Colonel Lukin – led by officers Tzvetaev, Orlov, and Maximov – participates in the battle, as well as the tank of Lieutenant Vasiliev. In KZ Sachsenhausen, Yakov Dzhugashvili refuses Andrei Vlasov's offer to exchange him for Friedrich Paulus. Meanwhile, in Kursk, the Germans advance. Maximov flees, but finally turns back and chooses to be shot when captured. When hearing about the German proposal regarding Yakov, Stalin rejects it, saying he will not trade a Field Marshal for a soldier. The Yugoslav partisans break out of an encirclement. The Soviet counter-offensive is launched in Kursk. Erich von Manstein commits all his forces to a final assault, bringing the Soviets close to defeat. Vatutin urges to send in the strategic reserve, which repels the Germans. After the Allied landing in Sicily, Mussolini is arrested on the King's orders. In Warsaw, the Polish Resistance bombs a German cinema. Mussolini is rescued by Otto Skorzeny and his commandos. The Red Army reaches the Dnieper. Lukin's regiment crosses it, presumably as the division's vanguard; unbeknownst to them, they are merely a ploy to mislead the enemy. The regiment is cut off without reinforcements and wiped out. Lukin is killed. Tzvetaev leads the survivors back to their lines.",
"Vincent Diderot Vincent Diderot (born 28 October 1980, Toulouse, France) is a French film director. After graduating in visual and performing Arts, he devoted himself to short film directing. Influenced by the painters Jackson Pollock, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Francis Bacon, as well as by the film directors David Lynch, Stanley Kubrick, Tim Burton, Terry Gilliam, his first short films, \"Louise\" and \"Sirène\", are experimental. Diderot is especially known for his short film \"La Révélation\" (\"The Revelation\") distributed by ADASTRA Films and broadcast on Canal+ in the TV show \"Mickrociné in 2009\". It was selected for more than 50 festivals, amongst which were the Fantasia Festival, Utopiales, Fantastisk Filmfestival, Ankara International Film Festival, and Off-courts. It won 'The Best Short Science Fiction Award' at the Cinefantasy Film Festival, as well as 'The Jury Special Mention' at The Festival Video of Orléans. The film is also part of the DVD, \"Destination Mars\", edited by Artus Films.",
"Robert Daudelin Robert Daudelin (born May 31, 1939, in Bromont, Quebec) is a Canadian film administrator and historian, best known as the longtime director of the Cinémathèque québécoise. He was a founder of the Quebec film magazine \"Objectif\", a programmer for the Montreal International Film Festival, and the first director of the Conseil québécois pour la diffusion du cinéma, and has served on the board of the International Federation of Film Archives. In 1987, he made \"Konitz: Portrait of the Artist as a Saxophonist\", a documentary film about jazz musician Lee Konitz, for the National Film Board. He received Quebec's Prix Albert-Tessier for contributions to Quebec cinema in 2002, a Special Achievement Genie in 2003, and was named as a Member of the Order of Canada in 2004.",
"André Bazin André Bazin (; 18 April 1918 – 11 November 1958) was a renowned and influential French film critic and film theorist. Bazin started to write about film in 1943 and was a co-founder of the renowned film magazine \"Cahiers du cinéma\" in 1951, with Jacques Doniol-Valcroze and Joseph-Marie Lo Duca. He is notable for arguing that realism is the most important function of cinema. His call for objective reality, deep focus, and lack of montage are linked to his belief that the interpretation of a film or scene should be left to the spectator. This placed him in opposition to film theory of the 1920s and 1930s, which emphasized how the cinema could manipulate reality. Bazin was born in Angers, France in 1918. He met future film and television producer Janine Kirsch while working at Labour and Culture, a militant organization associated with the French Communist party during World War II and eventually they married in 1949 and had a son named Florent. He died in 1958, age 40, of leukemia. Bazin started to write about film in 1943 and was a co-founder of the renowned film magazine \"Cahiers du cinéma\" in 1951, along with Jacques Doniol-Valcroze and Joseph-Marie Lo Duca. Bazin was a major force in post-World War II film studies and criticism. He edited \"Cahiers\" until his death, and a four-volume collection of his writings was published posthumously, covering the years 1958 to 1962 and titled \"Qu'est-ce que le cinéma?\" (\"What is cinema?\"). A selection from this collection was translated into English and published in two volumes in the late 1960s and early 1970s. They became mainstays of film courses in the English-speaking world, but never were updated or revised. In 2009, the Canadian publisher Caboose, taking advantage of more favourable Canadian copyright laws, compiled fresh translations of some of the key essays from the collection in a single-volume edition. With annotations by translator Timothy Barnard, this became the only corrected and annotated edition of these writings in any language. In 2018, this volume was replaced by a more extensive collection of Bazin's texts translated by Barnard, \"André Bazin: Selected Writings 1943-1958\"."
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"30 April 1956"
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Which film came out earlier, The Sky Hawk or Westbound (Film)?
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Westbound (film) Westbound is a 1959 American Western film directed by Budd Boetticher and starring Randolph Scott, Virginia Mayo and Karen Steele. The film was shot in September 1958 in Warnercolor at cost of a little more than half a million dollars. The Laramie Street set at Warner’s Burbank was used for the setting of Julesburg, Colorado. The Warner Ranch was used for other settings. David Buttolph composed the score. "Westbound" was released on April 25, 1959. The film was not a part of the Ranown cycle of Westerns for which Boetticher, Scott and Harry Joe Brown partnered; Scott owed Warners one picture from an old contract, so Boetticher volunteered to direct it himself so as to protect their brand. Although Boetticher never went so far as to disown the film, he felt it was not part of the series and would only discuss it outside of that context. Boetticher said this and "Decision at Sundown" were the only mediocre films of the Westerns he made with Randolph Scott. In 1864, Union army officer Captain John Hayes is asked to take charge of the Overland stagecoach line, which makes eastbound gold shipments from California that aid the Union's war effort. Hayes travels to Overland headquarters in his hometown of Julesburg, Colorado. He meets a Union soldier, Rod Miller, who has lost an arm, and Miller's wife, Jeannie. Clay Putnam has quit his position with Overland and is now secretly working for the Confederacy. He has the support of a quick-draw bandit, Mace, and also has married Hayes' former love, Norma. Mace's men pick a fight with the one-armed Miller, calling him "half a man" and raising Jeannie's ire. Rod is distraught at his condition, unable to even cock a pistol now. Hayes decides to ask the Millers if they would agree to run the local Overland station out of their farm. Mace wants to kill Hayes, but is talked out of it by Putnam, who fears the Union's response. He orders Mace's men to destroy Overland's stations and property instead and steal its deliveries of gold. Putnam is jealous of Hayes, though, believing Norma is still interested in him. He orders his men to avoid bloodshed.
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"The Air Hawk The Air Hawk is a 1924 American silent action adventure film directed by Bruce M. Mitchell and starring real life aviator Al Wilson. The aviation film was produced and distributed by Universal Pictures. Like many actors in the silent film era, Wilson did not survive the transition to \"talkies\", with \"The Air Hawk\", an example of his early work. As described in a review in a film magazine, John Ames (King), superintendent of an Arizona platinum mine, cannot discover the desperadoes who regularly steal from the mine. He and his daughter Edith (Faire) suspect Robert MacLeod (Shumway), who has offered to buy the mine and assume responsibility if Edith will marry him. She is in love with Al Parker (Wilson), a mining engineer. Ames finds a secret passage the thieves have been using and is killed by them. MacLeod blames “The Air Hawk,” a mysterious aviator, but Edith will not believe him because the aviator has befriended her on several occasions. MacLeod abducts her in his airplane; the Air Hawk follows and leaps from his airplane into MacLeod’s airplane overcoming the villain. It develops that the Air Hawk and Parker are one — a secret agent of the government sent to ferret out the mystery of the platinum thefts. Al is happily reunited Edith, with whom he has fallen in love. Al Wilson was not only the star of \"The Air Hawk\" but also flew as a \"stunt pilot\" in the film. After becoming a flying instructor and a short period as manager of the Mercury Aviation Company, founded by one of his students, Cecil B. DeMille, Wilson became more and more skilled in performing stunts, including wing-walking, and left the company to become a professional stunt pilot, specializing in Hollywood aviation films. Wilson worked together with stuntmen like Frank Clarke and Wally Timm and also for film companies, including Universal Pictures. After numerous appearances in stunt roles, he started his career as an actor in 1923 with the serial \"The Eagle's Talons\". In \"The Air Hawk\", another pilot/actor was Frank Tomick who flew one of the two Curtiss JN-4 aircraft that were involved in the mid-air battles. Wilson produced his own movies until 1927, when he went back to work with Universal.",
"Daredevils of the Clouds Daredevils of the Clouds (aka Daredevils of the Sky) is a 60-minute 1948 drama film, directed by George Blair and produced by Republic Pictures. The film stars Robert Livingston, Mae Clarke and James Cardwell. \"Daredevils of the Clouds\" depicts bush pilot flying in northern Canada. Trans-Global Airlines president Douglas Harrison (Pierre Watkin) wants to force Terry O'Rourke (Robert Livingston), and his rival Polar Airways out of business. Harrison connives Kay Cameron (Mae Clarke) to infiltrate O'Rourke's Edmonton, Alberta headquarters. Sgt. Dixon (Hugh Prosser) of the Canadian Air Patrol discovers she and Harrison's company pilot, Johnny Martin (James Cardwell), were involved in a scheme to ruin O'Rourke. Under the working title, \"Daredevils of the Sky\", principal photography began in mid-February 1948 at the Republic Pictures Corp. studio and backlots, Los Angeles, California. The Capelis XC-12 was featured as a prop, \"Daredevils of the Clouds\", was primarily a B film. Aviation film historian Stephen Pendo characterized the film as \"tedious\" with the flying scenes, \"routine\". Actor-comedian Chris Elliott kept a vintage \"Daredevils of the Clouds\" poster in his office when he was a writer on Late Night with David Letterman. It appears as a prop decoration in his first two appearances as \"The Guy Under The Seats\" on \"Late Night\" in early 1984.",
"The Hawk (1935 film) The Hawk reissued in 1937 as The Trail of the Hawk is a 1935 American Western film directed by Edward Dmytryk. It was Dmytryk's debut film as a director.",
"Westbound Mail Westbound Mail is a 1937 American Western film directed by Folmar Blangsted and starring Charles Starrett, Rosalind Keith and Edward Keane.",
"Sky High (2005 film) Sky High is a 2005 American superhero comedy film directed by Mike Mitchell and written by Paul Hernandez and \"Kim Possible\" creators Bob Schooley and Mark McCorkle. The film stars Michael Angarano, Danielle Panabaker, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kelly Preston and Kurt Russell. It also features Bruce Campbell, Cloris Leachman, Jim Rash, Steven Strait, Lynda Carter, Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald. It tells the story of Will Stronghold, the son of two superheroes who is enrolled in an airborne high school for teenage superheroes, where his powers kick in; he must deal with a growing distance from his old friends, a threat from mysterious supervillain and get the girl of his dreams. The film was released to theaters on July 29, 2005, and grossed 89.4 million worldwide on a 35 million budget. It received generally favorable reviews from critics. Will Stronghold is hesitant to start his first year in Sky High, a covert, perpetually airborne school for the children of superheroes. While his parents, Steve and Josie, are the world's premiere superheroes under the aliases of \"The Commander\" and \"Jetstream\", respectively, Will himself has not developed any superhuman abilities. This is a source of extreme anxiety for him since powers are often hereditary and he feels the burden to live up to his family's reputation. On his first day at school, Will and his best friend Layla, who possesses powerful plant-controlling abilities, make friends with several new students including Zach, Ethan, and Magenta while fending off the hazing by popular seniors, Speed, Lash, and Penny. During hero training, their instructor divides the groups into \"Hero\" or \"Sidekick\" based on their powers, and Will is quickly humiliated when he cannot manifest any abilities. Layla refuses to take the test, so they and their friends are placed into \"Hero Support\" (specialized classes for sidekicks) and realize that they are on the bottom of the clique-based social order. Even so, Will finds some comfort with their new teacher, Mr. Boy (formerly the Commander's sidekick, the \"All-American Boy\"), who shows them that there is honor in working behind the scenes, even if there is little glory.",
"Shadow Hawk Shadow Hawk or ShadowHawk may refer to:",
"Nighthawks (2019 film) Nighthawks is a 2019 American thriller film written, directed, and produced by Grant S. Johnson, which had its premiere in May 2019. The film stars Chace Crawford, Kevin Zegers and Janet Montgomery. Wide-eyed Midwest transplant Stan (Chace Crawford) agrees to play wingman to his calculating and privileged roommate Chad (Kevin Zegers) as they embark upon an exploration of glittering New York nightlife, whose darkest secrets are held captive by an elite band of millennials known as Nighthawks. The film premiered in a private screening on May 4, 2019 in New York. The film also played at the Montana International Film Festival. The film was released through online platforms on October 3, 2019.",
"Sky Pirates Sky Pirates (also known as Dakota Harris) is a 1986 Australian adventure film written and produced by John D. Lamond, and directed by Colin Eggleston. The film was inspired by Steven Spielberg's \"Raiders of the Lost Ark\" (1981), as well as borrowing liberally from \"The Philadelphia Experiment\" (1984), \"The Deer Hunter\" (1978), \"Dirty Harry\" (1971) and \"Mad Max\" (1979). In 1945, the Second World War is about to come to an end. Meanwhile, the Australian military has come across an ancient device which can be used to travel through time. It is imperative that the Allies have it and the Axis powers do not. The experienced aviator Lt. Harris (John Hargreaves) gets assigned to transport the precious item to Washington, D.C. Reverend Mitchell (Simon Chilvers), Mitchell's lovely daughter Melanie (Meredith Phillips), General Hackett (Alex Scott) and Major Savage (Max Phipps) are aboard the Douglas C-47 Skytrain transport. During the flight the power of the magic cargo makes the laws of nature fade, hereby causing a tremendous tempest which leaves Harris no other choice than to ditch the aircraft. In rescue boats they discover a weird and misty area full of wrecked ships of different eras. Rev. Mitchell claims there was a connection to the so-called Philadelphia Experiment. Harris remains unimpressed and concentrates on the survival of Melanie and his crew, even for the price of immolating the arcane freight against Savage's explicit orders. Back home Savage has Harris sentenced for insubordination by a military court. Harris escapes and seeks to unveil the background of these occurrences. He beseeches Rev. Mitchell's daughter Melanie to team up with him. Together they strive to retrieve the lost magic item. They disclose and confound Savage's hidden agenda before they become a happy couple. \"Sky Pirates\" was able to utilize a number of warbirds that were found in Australia including CAC Mustangs, Douglas C-47 Skytrains, Grumman Mallards and North American B-25 Mitchells. Principal photography took place in Australia from May to June 1984. The music in \"Sky Pirates\" was composed by Brian May, who also scored the first two Mad Max films. The soundtrack was produced, edited and mastered by Philip Powers four years later as part of his Australian film music archive project on the label \"oneMone Records\".",
"Southwest (film) Southwest () is a 2012 Brazilian drama film directed by Eduardo Nunes.",
"Hawks (film) Hawks is a 1988 British comedy film about two terminally ill patients, an English lawyer named Bancroft (Timothy Dalton) and a young Gridiron football player (Anthony Edwards), who decide to sneak out of their hospital rooms and live life to its fullest for whatever time they have left. Their goal is to reach a famous brothel in Amsterdam. Along the way, they encounter various characters including a pair of misfit British women played by Camille Coduri and Janet McTeer. It was filmed on location in London's Charing Cross Hospital and in the Netherlands. The film was directed by Robert Ellis Miller and based on a short story written by Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees and David English, and the screenplay was written by Roy Clarke. The musical score was composed by Gibb. The film is rated R16 in New Zealand for nudity, sexual references and offensive language."
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"The Sky Hawk"
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Which award the performer of song Don'T Bring Me Down got?
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Don't Bring Me Down (The Pretty Things song) "Don't Bring Me Down" is a song written by Johnny Dee (road manager for British band the Fairies) and first performed by the rock band the Pretty Things in 1964. It was a number 10 hit on the UK Singles Chart, and reached number 34 in Canada. The song was featured on the American version of their debut album, "The Pretty Things".
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"Don't Let It Bring You Down \"Don't Let It Bring You Down\" is the seventh track on Neil Young's 1970 studio album \"After the Gold Rush\". The song was written by Young. It also appears on the 1971 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young live album \"4 Way Street\" as well as Young's 2007 album \"Live at Massey Hall 1971\", which was recorded in 1971, and Young's 2013 album \"Live at the Cellar Door\", which was recorded in 1970. John Reed wrote an arrangement of this for The Hampton String Quartet in 2006. The song is played in double drop C tuning, which is similar to double drop D; however, the whole guitar is down tuned a whole step first, making the guitar strings C, G, C, F, A, and C. On \"4 Way Street\", Young says, \"Here is a new song, it's guaranteed to bring you right down, it's called 'Don't Let It Bring You Down'. It sorta starts off real slow and then fizzles out altogether.\" The crowd then roars with laughter.",
"Brock Downey Brock Downey is a rock band from Melbourne. Danny Baeffel and Luke Szabo had a duo called Star 10 which released a CD called \"Open House\" in 2001. They recruited Kristoff Lajoure and Ysbrand Daniel Brandsma and formed Brock Downey (named after the younger brother of a friend). Their debut single \"Don't Bring Me Down\" was released in July 2004 and debuted at #91 on the ARIA singles chart. Brandsma left the band later that year and was replaced by Ryan Sheldon in 2005. Baeffel, Szabo, Lajoure and Sheldon became the Scissor File, releasing an EP \"From a Whisper to a Scream\" in 2007. Szabo left to join the Hot Lies. The Scissor File continued on with multiple personnel changes until their break up with only Baeffel remaining from the original lineup. Baeffel went on to perform as Cisco Rose and Szabo took up the stage name Grass Taylor. singles",
"Bring Me Down Bring Me Down may refer to:",
"You Can't Bring Me Down \"You Can't Bring Me Down\" is a song by Suicidal Tendencies, released in 1990 on the \"Lights...Camera...Revolution!\" album. It delivered moderate commercial success, and aided in the band's transition from punk rock to thrash metal. Although the song never reached any of the major music charts, it was a successful single. The song begins with a hypnotic whammy bar solo, then goes into a clean, almost acoustic sounding rhythm guitar part, and then a guitar solo is added over it. The solo continues for a while, featuring 8-finger tapping and shredding, then the tempo speeds up and the song breaks into the main riff, and the first verse of lyrics, and finally the chorus. This continues until around 3:40, when suddenly the rhythm guitar is clean again, the tempo slows down, and another solo comes in. Then finally towards the end of the song it goes back to the main riff, only this time with lead vocalist Mike Muir ranting and almost talking instead of singing. Then the song goes back to the chorus, the chorus extends (with yet another guitar solo), and finally ends (Muir's last lyrics being \"Suicidal!\" and then cackling). The song was written by Muir and lead guitarist Rocky George. A music video was made for \"You Can't Bring Me Down\", which was a major hit on MTV's \"Headbangers Ball\". The video seemed mostly to be about the band's ban from appearances in Los Angeles; in the beginning of the video a newspaper pops up with the head line \"Suicidal Tendencies Banned In L.A.\" It showed Mike Muir being taken prisoner by a few unnamed authorities, who eventually executed him on the electric chair, despite heavy revolt from Muir's \"gang\" (perhaps representative of S.T.'s fans), who try to help him escape. When Muir is executed in the video you can see the United States Constitution flashing in the background, which is perhaps taking another stab at the PMRC, which the band believed limited the American constitutional right to freedom of speech. The song was also used in Danny Way's part in the skate video, \"The DC Video\".",
"Bring Me Down (Miranda Lambert song) \"Bring Me Down\" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Miranda Lambert. It was released in April 2005 as the second single from the album \"Kerosene\". The song reached #32 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Songs chart. The song was written by Lambert and Travis Howard. A music video was released for the song, directed by Kristin Barlowe.",
"All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down \"All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down\" is a song written by Raul Malo and Al Anderson, and recorded by American country music group The Mavericks featuring accordionist Flaco Jiménez. It was released in January 1996 as the second single from the 1995 album \"Music for All Occasions\". The song reached number 13 on the \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart, representing the band's highest entry there, and Jiménez's only entry. The music video was directed by Gerry Wenner and was filmed in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It premiered in January 1996. \"All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down\" debuted at number 66 on the U.S. \"Billboard\" Hot Country Singles & Tracks for the week of January 20, 1996.",
"You Bring Me Down \"You Bring Me Down\" is a 2006 single by the English alternative rock band, Blood Red Shoes. It was later re-recorded and re-issued by the band as their first CD release in early 2008. The limited-edition vinyl release was the version that was featured on the band's \"I'll Be Your Eyes\" compilation. The re-issued version was their first release available on CD and download and became their first single to chart, peaking at #64 on the UK Singles Chart.",
"Flint Bedrock Edson Masunda (born 27 April 1985), better known by his stage name Flint Bedrock, is a Zimbabwean singer, songwriter and music producer. Born in Seke, Harare Flint moved to London at the age of 17 before settling in Leeds in 2005 where he began his music career. He is best known for his charitable work through music including his 2015 collaboration with the Chuckle Brothers among other stars as part of The Crowd to raise money for the Bradford City stadium fire. Flint took piano lessons starting at the age of five. He went on to study music in school but didn't quite see it as a career path until he came across some local musicians in 2009 in Leeds. Bedrock released his debut single \"Dreamer\" in 2011 before re-releasing it again in 2013 under his then newly established record label and artist management company YSBG Entertainment. His debut single \"Dreamer\" was a success and led to a record deal offer but Flint did not sign; instead he spent the next few years perfecting his art on his own terms and developing his music business. He released his second single, \"Can't Bring Me Down\", accompanied by a music video in January 2017 which landed him a publishing contract with Gamma Music based in Russia. The deal would see the song distributed across Russia and the Baltic States, being played on radio and TV music channels. He also collaborated with fellow black artist and Donald Trump supporter Joy Villa on the song Freedom (fight for it) in July 2019. Flint Bedrock",
"She Don't Put It Down \"She Don't Put It Down\" is a song by American hip hop recording artist Joe Budden. It was released on October 16, 2012, as the first single from his sixth studio album \"No Love Lost\" (2013). The song, produced by T-Minus, features guest appearances from Lil Wayne and R&B singer Tank. It marked Joe Budden's first song as a lead artist in the Billboard Hot 100 since his 2003 hit \"Pump It Up”, though it only peaked at #96. On February 5, 2013, the music video for the song along with the remix featuring Fabolous, Lil Wayne and Tank premiered on 106 & Park. Twista does not appear in the video. The official remix was released for digital download on January 18, 2013, featuring Fabolous, Twista and Tank.",
"Lord Don't Slow Me Down (song) \"Lord Don't Slow Me Down\" is a song by English rock band Oasis. The song was released as a download-only single on 21 October 2007 and was also released on a limited edition 12-inch single in promotion of the release of Oasis' rockumentary of the same name, \"Lord Don't Slow Me Down\". The song debuted at number ten in the UK Singles Chart, becoming Oasis' 21st UK top 10 and first single by the band not to reach the top 4 since 1994's \"Cigarettes & Alcohol\". It was also Oasis' first stand alone non album single since \"Whatever\" in 1994. Written and sung by Noel Gallagher, Gallagher described it as being \"one of the best things, like The Who, The Yardbirds and the Jeff Beck Group combined, and it's got two drum solos on it!\". Recorded during the \"Don't Believe the Truth\" sessions, the song was likely originally intended to be included on said album, but was removed from the final track list by Gallagher. In May 2008, an unreleased studio version with Liam Gallagher on lead vocals was leaked online. This song was later included on \"Dig Out Your Soul\" bonus CD. Oasis never played the song live while the band was together, but Noel has since performed the song twice with his solo band Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds. The song has been very well received by critics and fans. Commenting on the song, Noel said \"You know there's a DVD coming out for Christmas... somewhat predictably. The title track was so brilliant that the powers that be said 'let's just put it out'.\" It debuted at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, fell 21 places to number 31 in the second week and left the chart the week after. It became Oasis' lowest charting song since 1994's \"Live Forever\" (which also peaked at number 10), a factor likely aided by the lack of significant publicity, a tangible release, and corresponding album."
] |
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[
"Rock and Roll Hall of Fame"
] |
Are both villages, Chavar Kalayeh, Rudsar and Allah Verdi Kandi, Poldasht, located in the same country?
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Allah Verdi Kandi, Poldasht Allah Verdi Kandi (, also Romanized as Allah Verdī Kandī; also known as ‘Abd ol ‘Alī Kandī) is a village in Gejlarat-e Gharbi Rural District, Aras District, Poldasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 236, in 55 families.
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[
"Kord Kandi, Chaldoran Kord Kandi (, also Romanized as Kord Kandī) is a village in Chaldoran-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Chaldoran County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 510, in 91 families.",
"Allah Rudbar Ale Rudbar (, also Romanized as Ale Rūdbār) is a village in Esbu Kola Rural District, in the Central District of Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. In 2006, its population was 1,608, in 390 families.",
"Chir Kandi Chir Kandi (, also Romanized as Chīr Kandī) is a village in Churs Rural District, in the Central District of Chaypareh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 187, in 46 families.",
"Gar Kandi, Sistan and Baluchestan Gar Kandi (, also Romanized as Gār Kandī and Gar Kandī; also known as Kār Gandī) is a village in Polan Rural District, Polan District, Chabahar County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 311, in 69 families.",
"Tat Kandi Tat Kandi (, also Romanized as Tāt Kandī) is a village in Chaldoran-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Chaldoran County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 232, in 40 families.",
"Kandsar-e Bibalan Kandsar-e Bibalan (, also Romanized as Kandsar-e Bībālān) is a village in Bibalan Rural District, Kelachay District, Rudsar County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,042, in 290 families.",
"Antar Kandi Antar Kandi (, also Romanized as ‘Antar Kandī) is a village in Chaldoran-e Shomali Rural District, in the Central District of Chaldoran County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 65, in 15 families.",
"Girah Kandi Girah Kandi (, also Romanized as Gīrah Kandī; also known as Esmāʿīl Kandī) is a village in Chaybasar-e Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Poldasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 352, in 71 families.",
"Kalayeh, Rudsar Kalayeh (, also Romanized as Kalāyeh) is a village in Siyarastaq Yeylaq Rural District, Rahimabad District, Rudsar County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 35, in 10 families.",
"Allah Kandi Allah Kandi (, also Romanized as Allāh Kandī) is a village in Charuymaq-e Markazi Rural District, in the Central District of Charuymaq County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 33, in 6 families."
] |
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[
"yes"
] |
Why did the director of film The Silk Express die?
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The Silk Express The Silk Express is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Ray Enright and written by Houston Branch and Ben Markson. The film, starring Neil Hamilton, Sheila Terry, Arthur Byron, Guy Kibbee, Dudley Digges and Arthur Hohl, was released by Warner Bros. on June 10, 1933. Donald Kilgore is determined to take a shipment of silk from Seattle to New York City by rail to break a monopoly set up by gangster Wallace Myton. Also aboard the train are Professor Axel Nyberg and his daughter Paula. He is paralyzed (except for the use of his eyes) and needs an operation in New York urgently to save his life. Myton has agents planted on the train to make sure the silk does not arrive in time. When Kilgore's secretary is found murdered in a sealed railroad car, Detective McDuff sees a chance to finally make a name for himself and insists the train remain where it is until he solves the crime. Kilgore, however, has him knocked out, and the train proceeds at a record-setting pace. Then Clark, the conductor, is also killed. Professor Nyberg has seen something and knows who the killer is; he is finally able, by blinking once for "no" and twice for "yes", to let the others know. Before he can reveal the murderer's identity, the train enters a tunnel. In the darkness, the criminal tries to silence him, but Kilgore spots some movement in the unlit compartment and saves the professor's life. The killer and his accomplice draw their guns, but "tramp" Rusty Griffith turns out to be a Lloyd's of London undercover investigator and bluffs them into surrendering their weapons. The train arrives at its destination in time. Mordaunt Hall of "The New York Times" praised Enright's direction, characterizing the film as "neatly measured and nicely balanced", as well as the cast's acting.
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[
"The Blue Express The Blue Express or China Express () is a 1929 Soviet silent drama film directed by Ilya Trauberg.",
"Avalanche Express Avalanche Express is a 1979 Cold War adventure thriller film starring Lee Marvin, Robert Shaw (in his final film appearance), Maximilian Schell, and Linda Evans and produced and directed by Mark Robson. The plot is about the struggle over a defecting Russian general. The screenplay by Abraham Polonsky was based on a 1977 novel by Colin Forbes. Russian general Marenkov (Robert Shaw) decides to defect to the West and CIA agent Harry Wargrave (Lee Marvin) leads the team that is to get him out. Wargrave decides that Marenkov should travel across Europe by train, on the fictional \"Avalanche Express\". The idea is to lure the Russians into attacking the train and thus discover who their secret agents in Europe are. Consequently, during the train journey they must survive both a terrorist attack and an avalanche, all planned by KGB spy-catcher Nikolai Bunin (Maximilian Schell). During production in Ireland, both director Mark Robson and starring actor Robert Shaw died of heart attacks within weeks of each other. Monte Hellman was brought in to finish the direction and Gene Corman (Roger Corman's brother) was called in to complete Robson's duties as producer. Robert Rietti was hired to re-record Robert Shaw's dialogue in the opening scene, as it was decided to redo that scene in Russian with English subtitles instead of having the Russians speak broken English. As a consequence, for continuity, all of Shaw's dialogue throughout the film was re-recorded by Rietti. Hellman, Corman and Rietti were not credited for their work, but the film's end credit contains a note stating: \"The producers wish to express their appreciation to Monte Hellman and Gene Corman for their post production services.\" Vincent Canby of \"The New York Times\" criticized the film's tackiness, suggesting it was copied from \"The Cassandra Crossing\" and likening it to the work of exploitation filmmaker Lew Grade, criticising the actors as appearing \"at a loss\". \"Time Out\" called it \"awful\", \"formulary\" and \"hammily acted\" but explained its curious editing as resulting from the production problems. The \"Radio Times\" gave it 2/5 stars, noting its disjointed quality but praising the acting and snowy special effects.Leonard Maltin's annual publication \"TV Movies\" gives the film a BOMB rating.",
"Streamline Express Streamline Express is a 1935 American comedy drama film directed by Leonard Fields, starring Victor Jory, Evelyn Venable and Esther Ralston, distributed by Mascot Pictures. The film is an adaptation of Twentieth Century (film)Twentieth Century released the previous year, in which Ralph Forbes appears in a similar role. Broadway star Patricia Wallace (Evelyn Venable) quits her Broadway show to run off with wealthy Fred Arnold (Ralph Forbes). Her director Jimmy Hart (Victor Jory) follows them aboard a super-speed monorail, the \"Streamline Express\". Meanwhile, also aboard is John Bradley (Clay Clement) and his mistress Elaine Vincent (Esther Ralston), but Bradley's wife Mary (Erin O'Brien-Moore) ends up on the train as well. When Elaine gives her crooked pal Gilbert Landon (Sidney Blackmer) a diamond pendant given her by Bradley, in order to keep Landon quiet about her past, she pretends that the pendant was stolen, in hopes of hiding the truth from Bradley. But Landon manages to throw suspicion on Jimmy Hart, who is masquerading as a steward. It takes confessions by several people to resolve everyone's dilemmas.",
"Robert Stevens (director) Robert Stevens (December 2, 1920 – August 7, 1989) was an American director and producer. He led on a career of producing and directing many television shows and movies for nearly 4 decades. He was most active throughout the 1950s and 1960s. His most famous and notable works include his works as the producer/director of \"Suspense\", as a frequent director of \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents\" and as a director of \"The Alfred Hitchcock Hour\" and as the director of the movie \"Change of Mind\". He also directed the pilot of \"The Twilight Zone\". Work became slow for Stevens after the 1970s. His last work was as the director of an episode of \"Amazing Stories\" in 1987. In 1989, shortly before his death, Stevens was robbed and beaten in his rented Westport, Connecticut home where he had retired to in 1987. He died shortly thereafter of cardiac arrest on August 7, 1989, in Westport. He was 68 years old.",
"Omid Nooshin Omid Nooshin (02 May 1974 - 15 January 2018) was an English film director and writer. He was best known for his debut independent feature film \"Last Passenger\". Nooshin was born in Guildford, Surrey, in 1974, the son of Hoshyar Nooshin, Emeritus Professor of Space Structures at Surrey University. He cites Star Wars as his inspiration to begin making short films at the age of 11, and wrote his first feature film outline whilst studying for his maths A-level at Christ’s College School, Guildford. He went on to study film at the University for the Creative Arts, Farnham. Upon graduation, Nooshin began making short films and commercials. During this time he took every opportunity to get close to movie production, gatecrashing the sets of Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut and George Lucas’ \"\". In the late 1990s, Nooshin travelled to New York and spent much of his time at famed method acting institute The Actor’s Studio, watching others including Arthur Penn take drama classes. In 1999, his short film Panic, based on a true story of a carjacking gone awry, played at several international film festivals and opened doors with industry executives in London and Los Angeles. Soon after, Nooshin began writing feature scripts and signed with talent agency CAA. He was represented by Verve. In 2008 Nooshin's script for Last Passenger was voted onto the Brit List of favourite unproduced British screenplays. It later became a $2.5m film starring Dougray Scott. Nooshin received a nomination for the Douglas Hickox Award For Best Debut Director at The British Independent Film Awards. In a 2013 interview for his former college Nooshin expressed his view that \"The film industry is built on a cultural fault line where the tectonic plates of art and commerce meet. As a filmmaker you should anticipate and be prepared to tough out frequent tremors and the occasional earthquake.\" Nooshin died suddenly on 15 January 2018 at the age of 43.",
"The Last Journey The Last Journey is a 1936 British drama film directed by Bernard Vorhaus and starring Godfrey Tearle, Hugh Williams and Judy Gunn. A train driver (Julien Mitchell) on his last journey before retirement thinks his fireman is having an affair with his wife. The driver intends to kill himself and his passengers by crashing the train. The train is filled with colourful characters, including a psychoanalyst who persuades the driver not to do it. The film was made at Twickenham Studios and is considered a quota quickie. \"The New York Times\" wrote, \"there are some engaging directorial touches, and there is some excellent photography\" ; and \"Britmovie\" noted a \"gripping low-budget b-movie portmanteau thriller featuring fast-cutting from director Bernard Vorhaus and impressive location shooting on the Great Western Railway.\"",
"Lowell Sherman Lowell J. Sherman (October 11, 1888 – December 28, 1934) was an American actor and film director. In an unusual practice for the time, he served as both actor and director on several films in the early 1930s. He later turned exclusively to directing. Having scored huge successes directing the films \"She Done Him Wrong\" (starring Mae West) and \"Morning Glory\" (which won Katharine Hepburn her first Academy Award), he was at the height of his career when he died after a brief illness. Born in San Francisco in 1888 to John Sherman and Julia Louise Gray, who were both connected with the theater; John as a theatrical management agent and Julia as a stage actress. His maternal grandmother had been an actress, starring with the actor Edwin Booth (brother of actor-assassin John Wilkes Booth). Sherman began his career as a child actor appearing in many touring companies. As an adolescent he appeared on Broadway in plays such as \"Judith of Bethulia\" (1904) with Nance O'Neil and in David Belasco's 1905 smash hit \"The Girl of the Golden West\" with Blanche Bates where he was a young Pony Express rider. By 1915, Sherman was appearing in silent films usually playing playboys, until D. W. Griffith cast him as the villain in the film, \"Way Down East\" (1920). He continued playing villains or playboys in films, as he had in the theatre, throughout the 1920s, in such films as \"Molly O'\" (1921), \"A Lady of Chance\" (1929) and later in talkies such as \"Ladies of Leisure\" (1930), and \"What Price Hollywood?\" (1932). In 1921, Sherman was in San Francisco attending a party as a guest of friend Roscoe Arbuckle at the St. Francis Hotel. He was in an adjoining room with madam Maude Delmont when Arbuckle was with Virginia Rappe. Rappe died four days afterwards. Lurid allegations circulated that Arbuckle had raped her at the party and inflicted injuries which directly caused her death. Arbuckle was arrested for murder (later downgraded to manslaughter), and Sherman had to testify during the ensuing trial. Sherman's career did not significantly suffer from the fallout of his attendance at the party.",
"Chinese Midnight Express Chinese Midnight Express is a 1997 Hong Kong crime drama film directed by Billy Tang. Set in the 1960s, the film stars Tony Leung Chiu-wai as a righteous journalists who gets framed into prison after exposing the collusion between the corrupt police force and triads.",
"Lewis Gilbert Lewis Gilbert (6 March 1920 – 23 February 2018) was an English film director, producer and screenwriter who directed more than 40 films during six decades; among them such varied titles as \"Reach for the Sky\" (1956), \"Sink the Bismarck!\" (1960), \"Alfie\" (1966), \"Educating Rita\" (1983) and \"Shirley Valentine\" (1989), as well as three James Bond films: \"You Only Live Twice\" (1967), \"The Spy Who Loved Me\" (1977) and \"Moonraker\" (1979). Lewis Gilbert was born as Louis Laurie Isaacs in Clapton, London, to a second-generation family of music hall performers, and spent his early years travelling with his parents, Ada (Griver), who was of Jewish descent, and George Gilbert, and watching the shows from the wings. He first performed on stage at the age of five, when asked to drive a trick car around the stage. This pleased the audience, so this became the finale of his parents' act. When travelling on trains, his parents frequently hid him in the luggage rack, to avoid paying a fare for him. His father contracted tuberculosis when he was a young man. He died aged 34, when Gilbert was seven. As a child actor in films in the 1920s and 1930s, he was the breadwinner for his family, his mother was a film extra, and he had an erratic formal education. In 1933, at the age of 13, he had a role in Victor Hanbury and John Stafford's \"Dick Turpin\", and at age 17 a small uncredited role in \"The Divorce of Lady X\" (1938) opposite Laurence Olivier. Alexander Korda offered to send him to RADA, but Gilbert chose to study direction instead, assisting Alfred Hitchcock's \"Jamaica Inn\" (1939). When the Second World War started, he joined the Royal Air Force's film unit, where he worked on various documentary films. He was eventually seconded to the First Motion Picture Unit of the U.S. Army Air Forces, where his commanding officer was William Keighley, an American film director, who allowed Gilbert to take on much of his film-making work. After the war, he continued to write and direct documentary shorts for Gaumont British, before entering low budget feature film production.",
"Orient Express (1927 film) Orient Express (German: Orientexpress) is a 1927 German silent thriller film directed by Wilhelm Thiele and starring Lil Dagover, Heinrich George and Angelo Ferrari. The film's sets were designed by the art director Hans Baluschek and Karl Machus."
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[
"heart attack"
] |
Were Anita (Singer) and Patrick Gorman (Politician) of the same nationality?
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Patrick Gorman Patrick Gorman may refer to:
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[
"Anita Sarawak Ithnaini binti Mohamed Taib (born 23 March 1952), better known by her stage name Anita Sarawak, is a Singaporean singer, actress and talk show host. Anita is the only child of actor and director S. Roomai Noor and actress Siput Sarawak. Her parents separated when she was very young, and she was allowed to meet her biological father only when she was 7 years old. At 15, Anita started performing at weddings and other functions. Anita first came to prominence at the age of 17, when she released her debut album \"With A Lot O’ Soul\". In 1974, she released her first Malay album. Throughout the 1970s, Anita actively promoted Singapore as a tourist destination through her performances. In 1974, she performed for a week in Hawaii; in 1975, she performed for nine days in West Germany; in 1976 in Monte Carlo for two weeks. In 1979, she launched a three-month performing tour of the United States, including shows in New York, San Francisco and Chicago. In 1985, she took off for Las Vegas and spent 18 years there performing at Caesars Palace. Anita has also hosted \"The Anita Talkshow\" and \"Astana\" and acted in the telecomedy \"Agensi Melor\" and the telemove \"Topeng (Mask)\". She also released a cookbook, \"Cooking with Love\", in 2004. Anita has been married four times. She is currently married to Briton Mohamad Mahathir Abdullah (formerly Martin Cox), who is her manager. The couple first met in Las Vegas, and wed in 2001. In December 1972, Anita married Mohamed Abdul Samad. The couple divorced in August 1979. In October 1981, Anita married the Indonesian singer Broery Pesulima despite her father's objections. Broery is Christian while Anita was born to Islam. The couple later separated. In 1995, Anita was caught for close proximity (khalwat) with her third husband J.D.Nicholson, who she was engaged to at the time. Anita attended a hearing in court and paid a fine. In September 2009, Anita's husband Mohamad Mahathir Abdullah was attacked outside her stepmother Datin Umi Kalthum's home in Taman Melawati, Malaysia. Anita subsequently forgave the robbers.",
"Michael O'Gorman Michael O'Gorman may refer to:",
"Anita Thompson Anita Thompson can refer to:",
"Michael Gorman (musician) Michael Gorman (1895–1970) was an Irish fiddler (from County Sligo), often partnering Margaret Barry. He has been described as \"one of traditional music's few superstars of the post-War decades\" and one whose \"musical roots in Ireland can be identified back to the artisan musicians in the immediate aftermath of the famine, and he was an active musician from about 1906 until 1970.\" The accompanying book to the Topic Records 70-year anniversary boxed set \"Three Score and Ten\" lists \"Her Mantle So Green\" as one of the classic albums and \"The Factory Girl\" from \"Street Songs and Fiddle Tunes of Ireland\" with Margaret Barry is track 9 on the third CD in the set.",
"Anita Smith Anita Smith may refer to:",
"Patrick Walsh Patrick Walsh may refer to:",
"Patrick E. Gorman Patrick Emmet \"Pat\" Gorman (November 27, 1892 – 1980) was an American lawyer and trade unionist affiliated with the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America. Gorman served as the union's highest-ranking official (Secretary-Treasurer) from 1942 to 1976. He was extremely committed to economic and social justice and was considered to be the \"social conscience\" of the Labor Movement. His papers are held at the Chicago History Museum. Gorman was born the youngest of 10 sons in a family of 11 children in Louisville, Kentucky. His father, Maurice Gorman born in 1840, was an Irish emigrant from Clonmel, County Tipperary from a \"long line of Irish patriots\". He traveled to the United States in 1870, entering in New York before settling in Louisville. He was a labor activist as well. In 1970, he was awarded the Eugene V. Debs Award for industrial unionism by the Eugene V. Debs Foundation.",
"Anita Miller Anita Miller may refer to:",
"Charlie Gorman Charlie Gorman may refer to:",
"William Gorman (priest) William Charles Gorman (b Lurgan 25 September 1826 - d Thomastown 20 May 1916) was an Anglican priest in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, who served most notably as Archdeacon of Ossory from 1883 until 1911. He was the son of the Reverend William Fortescue Gorman of Tannaghmore, Lurgan, County Antrim and his wife Harriet Greene (died 1839), daughter of Sir Jonas Greene, Recorder of Dublin and his wife, the leading actress Marianne Hitchcock. He married Harriet Pitcairn West of Cork, daughter of Henry Augustus West and Elizabeth Denne Pitcairn, in 1856. They had at least two children, William and Amy. His widow died in 1926. A graduate of Trinity College, Dublin he was ordained in 1852. After curacies at Kiltegan and Kilkenny he was the Incumbent at Kilmocar, 1859–63; Kilsheelan, 1863–69; and Thomastown, 1869–1908."
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[
"no"
] |
Were Enrico Pfister and Paul Maccready from the same country?
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Enrico Pfister (curler) Enrico Pfister (born 7 April 1991) is a Swiss curler from Rüdtligen. He competed at the 2015 Ford World Men's Curling Championship in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, as third for the Swiss team, which placed seventh in the tournament.
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[
"Max Pfister Max Pfister (21 April 1932 in Zürich – 21 October 2017 in Saarbrücken) was a Swiss Romance studies scholar and linguist. He is the initiator of the LEI (\"Lessico etimologico italiano\"), which deals with Italian and German research of etymology and dialectology of the Italian language, now directed together with Wolfgang Schweickard .",
"Beat Pfister Beat Pfister (born 5 July 1949) is a Swiss hurdler. He competed in the men's 110 metres hurdles at the 1972 Summer Olympics.",
"Patrick McCartan Patrick McCartan (13 May 1878 – 28 March 1963) was an Irish republican and politician. He served the First Dáil (1919–1921) on diplomatic missions to the United States and Soviet Russia. He returned to public life in 1948, serving in Seanad Éireann for Clann na Poblachta. McCartan was also a doctor. He was born in Eskerbuoy, near Carrickmore, County Tyrone, one of five children, to Bernard McCartan, a farmer, and the former Bridget Rafferty (d. 1918). He emigrated to the USA as a young man and became a member of Clan na Gael in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and edited the journal \"Irish Freedom\". He returned to Ireland some years later and qualified as a doctor. He also continued working with nationalist politics and worked closely with Bulmer Hobson and Denis McCullough with the Dungannon Clubs and the Irish Republican Brotherhood. McCartan was to take part in the 1916 Easter Rising with the Tyrone volunteers but did not, owing to Eoin MacNeill's countermanding order. He was arrested after the Rising and interned in an open prison in England. In 1917 he took \"French leave\" to return to Ireland and assist Sinn Féin in the by-elections being held throughout Ireland that year. McCartan contested the by-election in South Armagh for Sinn Féin but lost out to the Irish Parliamentary Party candidate. He was later elected in a by-election in Tullamore in 1918. He was re-elected in the 1918 general election. He was re-elected for Leix–Offaly at the 1921 elections. He gave the Anglo-Irish Treaty his support, albeit reluctantly, in the Dáil debates, saying he would not \"vote for chaos.\" He blamed the whole cabinet for the situation and said that \"The Republic of which Mr. de Valera was President is dead.\" Disillusioned, he quit politics for the next twenty years. At the meeting of the First Dáil in January 1919 McCartan was appointed Sinn Féin's representative in the USA where he would remain until 1921. One of his tasks was to secure American recognition before the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, but this proved impossible.",
"Paul McKeever Paul McKeever may refer to:",
"Paul Hubschmid Paul Hubschmid (; 20 July 1917 – 31 December 2001) was a Swiss actor. He was most notable for his role as Henry Higgins in a production of \"My Fair Lady\". In some of his Hollywood films he used the name Paul Christian. He appeared in dozens of films and television series between 1938 and 1991. Many of these were German and International productions.",
"Oskar Pfister Oskar Pfister (23 February 1873 – 6 August 1956) was a Swiss Lutheran minister and lay psychoanalyst who was a native of Wiedikon. Pfister studied theology, philosophy and psychology at the University of Zurich and the University of Basel, graduating in 1898 in the philosophical faculty. He then became a pastor, serving in Wald (canton of Zürich) until 1920. He is remembered for his efforts involving the application of psychoanalysis to the science of education, as well as his belief system in a synthesis of psychology and theology. Pfister was a pioneer of modern Swiss psychology, belonging to a psychoanalytical circle in Zurich that was centered on Eugen Bleuler and Carl Jung. In 1919, he formed the Swiss Society for Psychoanalysis. Although the psychiatrist Emil Oberholzer founded a separate Swiss Medical Society for Psychoanalysis in 1928, Pfister stuck with the group he had started, defending Sigmund Freud's position on lay analysis that Oberholzer's group rejected. Pfister was an early associate of Freud, maintaining an ongoing correspondence with him from 1909 to 1939 (the year of Freud's death). Pfister believed that theology and psychology were compatible disciplines and advocated the concept of a \"Christian Eros\". He was especially interested in Freud's concepts of the Oedipus Complex, castration anxiety and infantile sexuality. From a religious standpoint, Pfister advocated a return to what he saw as the original fundamental teachings of Jesus Christ. The Oskar Pfister Award is awarded by the American Psychiatric Association, with the Association of Professional Chaplains, for significant contributions to the field of religion and psychiatry.",
"Paul McKee Paul McKee may refer to:",
"Paul de Graffenried Paul de Graffenried (10 June 1900 – 17 November 1945) was a Swiss fencer. He competed at the 1928, 1932 and 1936 Summer Olympics.",
"Maurice Eustace Maurice Eustace may refer to:",
"Paul Glass Paul Eugene Glass (born November 19, 1934) is a Swiss-American composer. Born in Los Angeles, California, Glass is the son of silent film actor and film executive Gaston Glass. He was educated at the University of Southern California (BM), and was taught by Ingolf Dahl, and Goffredo Petrassi in Rome (on a Fulbright Scholarship). Glass also attended Princeton University under a fellowship, and attended the Institute of International Education in Warsaw with Witold Lutoslawski on a grant. He joined ASCAP in 1961. Glass has been married twice, the first time being to Marina Fistoulari Mahler, on April 3, 1965, and the second time being to Penelope Margaret Mackworth-Praed, on July 12, 1977. Glass and Mackworth-Praed currently live in Magadino, Switzerland. Both have been professors at Franklin University Switzerland. He is sometimes credited as Paul E. Glass. Opera"
] |
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[
"no"
] |
Which film has the director who died first, Zaza (1939 Film) or Le Samouraï?
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Samourais Samourais is a 2002 martial arts film starring Cyril Mourali, Jean-François Lénogue, Mai Anh Le and Yasuaki Kurata. It was directed by Giordano Gederlini and written by Matt Alexander and Alexandre Coquelle.
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[
"Alexander Esway Alexander Esway (20 January 1895 – 23 August 1947) was a Hungarian-born film director, screenwriter, and producer. Esway was born Sándor Ezry in Budapest. In the late 1920s and early 1930s he worked as a director and screenwriter, first in Germany and then in the UK. He began working primarily in France from 1933, although he also continued to work in the UK where he set up a short-lived production company, Atlantic Film Productions, in 1935. The company's only production was \"Thunder in the City\", starring Edward G. Robinson. During World War II, he worked in Hollywood on Allied propaganda films, most notably, \"The Cross of Lorraine\". After the war, he returned to France where he made his last two films: the two-part war film \"Le Bataillon du ciel\", based on the book of the same name by Joseph Kessel, and \"L'Idole\", starring Yves Montand. Esway died in St. Tropez at the age of 52. Director Screenwriter Producer",
"Togo Mizrahi Togo Mizrahi () (June 2, 1901 – June 5, 1986) was an Egyptian director, actor, producer, and screenwriter. Mizrahi was a prolific filmmaker best known for making popular comedies and musicals. Between 1930 and 1946, he directed 30 Arabic-speaking films and four Greek speaking films, and he produced several films directed by other filmmakers. Joseph Elie Mizrahi was born in Alexandria, Egypt to a Jewish family with Italian nationality. As a child he adopted the nickname, Togo, after Admiral Togo, commemorating Japan's victory over Russia in the Russo-Japanese War. In 1929 Mizrahi established a studio in Alexandria, Egypt, and founded a production company, The Egyptian Films Company. He produced films in Alexandria until 1939, when he moved to Cairo. Over the course of his career, Mizrahi worked with many popular actors and musicians. He made a number of comedies starring Chalom (Leon Angel), Ali al-Kassar, and Fawzi al-Jazayirli. He directed five films starring singer Leila Mourad. His film, \"Sallama\"(1945), starring the Egyptian diva, Umm Kulthum, is thought to be her best performance on screen. He also worked with Youssef Wahbi, Amina Rizk, and Anwar Wagdi. Mizrahi directed actors Taheyya Kariokka and Ismail Yassine in their screen debuts. In 1946, Mizrahi was accused of Zionist collaboration. Although he seemed poised for a comeback in 1949, Mizrahi never made another movie. In 1952, he appointed his brother Alfred Mizrahi to oversee daily operations of the Egyptian Films Company. Mizrahi left Egypt and settled in Rome, where he died on June 5, 1986.",
"Ali Zouaoui Ali Zouaoui (; November 10, 1925 – February 18, 1972) was a Tunisian economist and politician. He was a member of an old family which hailed from Hajeb El Ayoun, and studied law and economics in France. He was the chairman of Espérance Sportive de Tunis from 1968 to 1970. Then, he served as the governor of the Central Bank of Tunisia from 1970 to 1972; in the latter year he was killed in a traffic accident. He married Soufiya Belkhodja, sister of the painter Néjib Belkhodja and daughter of Tunisian craftsmen, then Arlette Ravalec. He had two daughters and a son. He is the grandfather of the actress, Dorra Zarrouk.",
"Zaim Muzaferija Zaim Muzaferija (9 March 1923 – 5 November 2003) was a Bosnian film, television and stage actor, and poet. The magazine \"6yka\" (\"Buka\") called Muzaferija a \"legend of Bosnian cinema.\" During World War II, Muzaferija was arrested in 1942 with a group of 36 anti-fascists. In his retirement he became a teacher of German and French. Muzaferija became an actor when he was in his late 30s, his first film being \"Uzavreli grad\" (\"Boom Town\"), directed by Veljko Bulajić. The film premiered in February 1961. Muzaferija died on 5 November 2003 after a long illness. He was buried in a Muslim funeral 7 November 2003.",
"Shéhérazade (film) Shéhérazade is a 1963 French adventure film directed by Pierre Gaspard-Huit and starring Anna Karina as the title character. The film is loosely based on the \"One Thousand and One Nights\". Baghdad in the year 809. The city is ruled by the Caliph, Haroun-al-Rashid, to whom the beautiful and spiritual Scheherazade has been promised. Ambassadors of Charlemagne arrive in Baghdad to ask the Caliph for free access to the Christian holy sites. Among these envoys from the west is the knight Renaud Villecroix, who falls in love with her. The grand vizier, enemy of the Caliph, ambushes a traveling party and takes Scheherazade prisoner, threatening to cut off her head. Renaud saves her and flees into the desert with her. It was the 46th top-grossing film of 1963 in France, where it sold 1,375,848 tickets at the box office. In Poland, it sold more than tickets, making it one of the thirteen highest-grossing foreign films in Poland . This adds up to more than 3,375,848 tickets sold in Europe.",
"Eugène Lourié Eugène Lourié (; 8 April 1903 – 26 May 1991) was a French film director, art director, production designer, set designer and screenwriter who was known for his collaborations with Jean Renoir and for his 1950s science fiction movies. Allmovie contributor Sandra Brennan has written that he was \"among the best art directors in French cinema.\" He was nominated for an Academy Award in 1969 for Best Visual Effects on the film \"Krakatoa, East of Java\". Lourié was born in Kharkov, Russian Empire in 1903. His first experience with cinema was in 1911 when a movie theater opened in Kharkov. In 1919, he worked on an anti-communist film titled \"Black Crowes\". After he fled from the Soviet Union, he made his way to Istanbul. While there he made money for a fare to Paris, France by painting and drawing movie posters. He even slept in the theater on top of a piano to save money. In the 1930s, he worked as a production designer for such directors as Jean Renoir, Max Ophüls, and René Clair. As an assistant and production designer to Renoir, he worked on such French films as \"La Grande illusion\" and \"La Règle du Jeu\". After Renoir had moved to Hollywood in the early 1940s, Lourié moved as well, and worked with other directors including Sam Fuller, Charlie Chaplin, and Robert Siodmak. Then in 1953, he made his directorial debut with \"The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms\", the first of three dinosaur films that Lourié would direct. The film was profitable, however Lourié has said that he regrets that the film typecast him as a science fiction director. He decided that after his 1961 film, \"Gorgo\", he would stop directing movies because he did not want to direct \"the same comic-strip monsters.\" Eight years later, he received an Academy Award nomination for his visual effects on \"Krakatoa, East of Java\". In 1980, Lourié designed Clint Eastwood's \"Bronco Billy\". Lourié also had an acting part in Richard Gere's 1983 picture, \"Breathless\".",
"Zazà Zazà is an opera by Ruggero Leoncavallo, with a libretto by the composer. The story concerns the French music hall singer, Zazà, and her affair and subsequent decision to leave her lover, Milio, when she discovers that he is married. The music is influenced by the French music halls where Leoncavallo had spent his early years as a composer. Its premiere was at the Teatro Lirico in Milan on 10 November 1900, starring Rosina Storchio as Zazà, Edoardo Garbin as Milio, Mario Sammarco as Cascart and Clorinda Pini-Corsi as Anaide, and conducted by Arturo Toscanini. It was later seen in opera houses around the world. Over the following twenty years it received over fifty new productions from Palermo to Paris, Buenos Aires to Moscow, Cairo to San Francisco, arriving at the Metropolitan Opera on 16 January 1920 in a production directed by David Belasco and conducted by Roberto Moranzoni, starring Geraldine Farrar, Giulio Crimi and Pasquale Amato, and later, Giovanni Martinelli and Giuseppe De Luca. \"La bohème\" and \"Zazà\" are the operas of Leoncavallo's which most nearly matched the success of \"Pagliacci\", although both enjoy few contemporary productions, and are relatively little-known beyond circles of Opera enthusiasts. \"Dayton Daily News\" editor Betty Dietz Krebs described \"Zazà\" as alternating \"between moments of passion and intensity and stretches of comedy\" and said that it contains \"a string of arias.\" Reviews of early performances in New York were lukewarm on the music and stated that the best music was similar to that of \"Pagliacci\". Reviewing an early performance at the Metropolitan Opera in 1920, the \"New York Tribune\" stated that the music \"is not fresh or original, nor even characteristic of its composer except in places where it is reminiscent of \"Pagliacci\", and even in its best moments it is sadly lacking in distinction; but it challenges praise which must go to the creation of a man who knew his business, knew it thoroughly.\" Reviewing the Metropolitan premiere \"The Standard Union\" stated that the opera \"was best when it most recalled [\"Pagliacci\"].",
"There's No Tomorrow (film) There's No Tomorrow (French: Sans lendemain) is a 1939 French drama film directed by Max Ophüls and starring Edwige Feuillère, George Rigaud and Daniel Lecourtois. A number of those employed on the film were exiles from Nazi Germany. It premiered in Algiers in December 1939 before going on general release across France in March 1940. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Max Douy and Eugène Lourié. In order to support her young son, a woman becomes a dancer in a striptease cabaret act.",
"Jean Zay Jean Élie Paul Zay (6 August 1904 – 20 June 1944) was a French politician. He served as Minister of National Education and Fine Arts from 1936 until 1939. He was imprisoned by the Vichy government from August 1940 until he was murdered in 1944. Zay was born in Orléans, in the départment of Loiret, about south of Paris. His father, Leon Zay, descended from a Jewish family from Metz, but was born and died in Orléans, where he was the director of a radical socialist regional newspaper, \"Le Progrès du Loiret\". His mother Alice Chartres was a Protestant and a teacher. He grew up with his sister in the Protestant religion. Zay was educated at the Lycée Pothier in Orléans, and became a lawyer in 1928. He was politically active from his early days, joining the Radical Party aged 21. With his wife, Madeleine Dreux, he had two daughters, Catherine Martin-Zay, and Hélène Mouchard-Zay (born 1940). In May 1932, he was elected to the French parliament as député to represent Loiret, for the Radical Socialist Party. He defeated the incumbent representative of the Popular Democratic Party, Maurice Berger. He became one of the \"Jeunes Turcs\" (Young Turks) who wanted to renew the Radical Party, and was instrumental in the party joining the Popular Front in 1935. After the 1936 election, he was the Minister of National Education and Fine Arts from June 1936. While serving in his position, he extended the school leaving age and introduced a common curriculum in elementary schools. In 1938, Jean Zay proposed the creation of an international film event in France, which was planned to debut in Cannes in 1939. Due to the outbreak of the Second World War, the inauguration of the Cannes Film Festival was postponed until 1946. He was a freemason. He resigned as minister in 1939 to join the French Army on the outbreak of the Second World War, serving as a second lieutenant attached to the headquarters of the Fourth Army. He remained a député until 1942, and he was given leave to attend the last session of the French Parliament, held in Bordeaux in June 1940.",
"Monsieur des Lourdines Monsieur des Lourdines is a 1943 French historical drama film directed by Pierre de Hérain and starring Raymond Rouleau, Germaine Dermoz and Mila Parély. It is an adaptation of Alphonse de Chateaubriant's 1911 novel of the same title. The film's director was the stepson of Marshal Pétain and its themes are supportive of Vichyite policy. It was shot at the Saint-Maurice Studios in Paris. The film's sets were designed by the art director Lucien Aguettand. A young man from an aristocratic family tires of the country life and moves to Paris where he squanders his inheritance. Returning to his home with remorse, he reconciles with his father and becomes engaged to his true love."
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"Le Samouraï"
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Do both films Awakening Of The Beast and The Origin Of Violence have the directors that share the same nationality?
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The Origin of Violence The Origin of Violence (French title: L'Origine de la violence) is a 2016 Franco-German drama film directed by Élie Chouraqui, based on the Prix Renaudot-winning novel of the same name by Fabrice Humbert. The film won the Best Narrative Audience Award at the Philadelphia Jewish Film Festival 36.
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"The Nature of the Beast (1919 film) The Nature of the Beast is a 1919 British silent drama film directed by Cecil M. Hepworth and starring Alma Taylor, Gerald Ames and James Carew. The screenplay concerns a Belgian refugee who marries a British aircraft manufacturer. It was based on a 1918 novel of the same title by E. Temple Thurston. During the First World War, a Belgian refugee marries a British aircraft manufacturer, but a former German enemy tries to force her to give over secret documents.",
"The Awakening (2006 film) The Awakening is a 2006 Bollywood documentary film produced by Ajay Devgn and Kumar Mangat Pathak and directed by Faruk Kabir. The film has an interaction between Ajay Devgn and a small kid who lost his parents in the Mumbai floods on 26 July 2005. Ajay Devgan then shares his own bad experience on that day.",
"Dario Argento Dario Argento (; born 7 September 1940) is an Italian film director, producer, screenwriter, actor and critic. His influential work in the horror genre during the 1970s and 1980s, particularly in the subgenre known as \"giallo\", has led him to being referred to as the \"Master of the Thrill\" and the \"Master of Horror\". His films as director include his \"Animal Trilogy\", consisting of \"The Bird with the Crystal Plumage\" (1970), \"The Cat o' Nine Tails\" (1971) and \"Four Flies on Grey Velvet\" (1971); his \"Three Mothers\" trilogy, consisting of \"Suspiria\" (1977), \"Inferno\" (1980) and \"The Mother of Tears\" (2007); and his stand-alone films \"Deep Red\" (1975), \"Tenebrae\" (1982), \"Phenomena\" (1985), and \"Opera\" (1987). He co-wrote the screenplay for Sergio Leone's \"Once Upon a Time in the West\" (1968) and served as George A. Romero's script consultant on \"Dawn of the Dead\" (1978), for which he also composed the soundtrack with his long-time collaborators Goblin. Argento was born in Rome, the son of a Sicilian film producer and executive Salvatore Argento (1914–1987) and a Brazilian photographer Elda Luxardo, who was of Italian ancestry. He began his career in film as a critic, writing for magazines while still attending high school. Argento did not attend college, electing rather to take a job as a columnist at the newspaper \"Paese Sera\". While working at the newspaper, Argento also began working as a screenwriter. His most notable work was for Sergio Leone, Bernardo Bertolucci and his collaboration on the story for the Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western \"Once Upon a Time in the West\". Argento began work on his directorial debut, the \"giallo\" film \"The Bird with the Crystal Plumage\" (\"L'uccello dalle piume di cristallo\", 1970), which was a major hit in Italy.",
"Hanuš Burger Hans Herbert Burger (June 4, 1909 Prague – November 13, 1990, Munich), also known as Hanuš Burger, Hans Burger, and Jan Burger, as well as under the pseudonyms Hans Herbert and Petr Hradec, was a theater, film, and television director, playwright and author of books and screenplays, including the documentary film \"Crisis\" (1939), and the German language version of \"Death Mills\" (1945), supervised by Billy Wilder. He was of Jewish descent.",
"A History of Violence A History of Violence is a 2005 action thriller film directed by David Cronenberg and written by Josh Olson. It is an adaptation of the 1997 graphic novel of the same title by John Wagner and Vince Locke. The film stars Viggo Mortensen as the owner of a small-town diner who is thrust into the spotlight after confronting two robbers in self-defense, thus changing the lives of him and his family forever. Maria Bello, William Hurt, and Ed Harris play supporting roles. The film was in the main competition for the 2005 Palme d'Or. The film was put into limited release in the United States on September 23, 2005, and wide release on September 30, 2005. \"A History of Violence\" is largely considered one of the greatest films of the 2000s. It was specifically praised for its performances, screenplay, atmosphere, and plot. William Hurt was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, while Olson was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay. Mortensen himself praised it as \"one of the best movies [he's] ever been in, if not the best\", also declaring it was a \"perfect film noir\" or \"close to perfect\". It is also notable as being one of the last major Hollywood films to be released on VHS. Tom Stall is a diner owner who lives in small-town Indiana with his family: wife Edie, teenage son Jack, and daughter Sarah. When two spree killers enter his restaurant and threaten those inside, Tom deftly kills them. He is hailed a hero, and the incident makes national news. Tom is visited by gangster Carl Fogarty, who alleges that Tom is actually Joey Cusack and was previously affiliated with the Irish Mob in Philadelphia. Tom vehemently denies this, but Carl remains persistent and begins to stalk the Stall family. Under pressure, Tom's relationship with his family faces continued strain. Following an argument with his father over the use of violence against a school bully, Jack runs away. He is captured and held hostage by Carl, who confronts Tom and demands that he return to Philadelphia in exchange for his son's release. After Jack is released, Tom manages to kill Carl's henchmen, but Carl shoots him. As Carl prepares to kill him, Tom drops the façade and manifests his former self. However, Jack kills Carl with a shotgun.",
"Dalai Lama Awakening Dalai Lama Awakening is a 2014 feature-length documentary film, produced and directed by Khashyar Darvich and narrated by actor Harrison Ford. With over 30 minutes of additional footage and a new score, the film is a Director's Cut and revision of \"Dalai Lama Renaissance\", the award-winning 2007 documentary. The film presents the journey of innovative Western thinkers who travel to India to meet with the Dalai Lama. The film features Dr. Michael Beckwith (\"The Secret\"), quantum physicists Fred Alan Wolf and Amit Goswami (\"What The Bleep Do We Know\"), radio host and author Thom Hartmann, author Vicki Robin, philosopher Vandana Shiva, biologist Elisabet Sahtouris, social scientist Jean Houston, and others. The film opened in the U.K. in 2014 and played to sold out audiences during its 2015 tour of the U.S. and Canada.",
"Alain Godard Alain Godard is a screenwriter and film producer best known for such films as \"The Name of the Rose\", \"Two Brothers\", \"Enemy at the Gates\", \"Day of the Falcon\", \"Wolf Totem\" and \"Dracula and Son\".",
"Genesis (2004 film) Genesis is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou that explores the origins of earth and its inhabitants. The film focuses on the life of many animals. It is narrated by Sotigui Kouyaté. The film credits also list the natural events, animals and their situations as part of the \"cast list.\"",
"Claudio Argento Claudio Argento (born 15 September 1943) is an Italian film producer and screenwriter. Most of the titles he has produced have been the horror films directed by his older brother, Dario Argento. One major exception was Alejandro Jodorowsky's cult film \"Santa Sangre\" (1989); in addition to producing, Claudio Argento co-wrote the screenplay for the film. Argento was an associate producer for George A. Romero's \"Dawn of the Dead\" (1978). In 2010, Claudio contacted George A. Romero about directing a 3D remake of Dario's classic \"Deep Red\" and told Romero that Dario would also be involved in the project. Romero, who showed interest in the film decided to contact Dario, who said he knew nothing about the remake, Romero declined the offer to direct the remake and it is unknown if Claudio plans to go forward with the remake.",
"Jakob Verbruggen Jakob Verbruggen (born in Merksem in 1980) is a Belgian television and film director. He studied at the Royal Institute for Theatre, Cinema and Sound (RITCS) in Belgium. He has directed episodes of \"The Fall\", \"London Spy\", and \"House of Cards\". In 2016 he directed \"Men Against Fire\", an episode of the third series of the anthology series \"Black Mirror\". In 2017 he directed the first three episodes of the event series \"The Alienist\". Deadline revealed in August 2020 that Verbruggen joined as director and executive producer of Invasion."
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"no"
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Which country the director of film Contract (2008 Film) is from?
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Contract (2008 film) Contract is a 2008 Bollywood spy thriller film written by Prashant Pandey and directed by Ram Gopal Varma. The film is setup in the backdrop of terrorism, and the infiltration by R.A.W. and Intelligence Bureau. Starring Adhvik Mahajan, Upendra Limaye, Prasad Purandare, and Zakir Hussain in pivotal roles, the film received mixed reviews. The film was screened retrospective at the 2010 Fribourg International Film Festival. The story revolves around an ex-Special Protection Group Commando Amaan Malik, whose wife and daughter are killed in a Jihad inspired terrorist attack. Indian Agents working with the RAW of India, approach Amaan to collaborate with him to hunt the mastermind Sultan responsible for these serial attacks in Mumbai. Sultan, is executing another mission of serial blasts including a Government Hospital in Mumbai. Supported with Intelligence Bureau (India), how Amaan is able to infiltrate the underworld gangs to reach Sultan, the Chief Mentor forms the rest of the plot.
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"Contract to Kill Contract to Kill is a 2016 American action film starring Steven Seagal. It received a limited theatrical release in the United States, and was released via video on demand. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) border patrol agents apprehend two \"other than Mexican\" migrants affiliated with Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and Daesh; the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) suspects that the terrorists are negotiating a deal with the Sonora Cartel – headed by José Rivera (Mircea Drambareanu) – to smuggle terrorists from Mexico into the United States. Former Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and CIA Agent John Harmon (Steven Seagal), who had raided a Sonora compound and killed its previous leader, El Mini Oso, is enlisted by CIA intermediary Matt Beck (Andrei Stanciu) to end the extremists' plot. Harmon recruits old flame and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent Zara Hayek (Jemma Dallender) and United States Army Special Forces/CIA-trained spy-drone pilot Matthew Sharp (Russell Wong) after learning that the meeting between the terrorist coalition and the Sonora Cartel will be in Istanbul, Turkey. In Istanbul, Harmon's team spy on Hezbollah leader Ayan Al-Mujahid (Sergiu Costache) and Rivera but the meeting is cut short and adjourned after al-Mujahid notices Sharp's drone. Following a brief car chase and shootout between Harmon and al-Mujahid's men, Harmon learns from Beck that the real target is Abdul Rauf (Ghassan Bouz), the bomb-maker responsible for the downing of a Crimea Airlines plane in Syria. Rivera's men raid Harmon's safehouse and abduct Hayek; Harmon and Sharp locate and kill Al-Mujahid and his men at the Palace Hotel. Rivera and Rauf escape to the former's compound in Rumelifeneri but are tracked down by Harmon, who shoots them in the neck and head respectively, before embracing Hayek. The film ends with Harmon musing about the necessity of operatives like himself. The film was shot in Romania. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 0% approval rating based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 1.2/10. Metacritic, using a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 3 out of 100 based on 5 critics, indicating \"overwhelming dislike\". The A.V.",
"Japan (film) Japan is a 2008 American independent film written and directed by Fabien Pruvot. The film follows a contract killer who goes by the code name Japan. He meets a man named Alfred at a hotel, who was recently evicted from his home. The two get along and Japan befriends Alfred. Their friendship leads the film into a twist and turn ending. The film was shot in Los Angeles, California and Phoenix, Arizona.",
"The Deal (2008 film) The Deal is a 2008 American satirical comedy film directed by Steven Schachter. The screenplay by Schachter and William H. Macy is based on the 1991 novel of the same title by Peter Lefcourt. Macy and Meg Ryan co-star. The film was shot in Cape Town and other South African locations. It premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and was the opening night attraction at the Sarasota Film Festival. It also was shown at the Philadelphia Film Festival, the Maui Film Festival, and the Traverse City Film Festival, among others, but never was given a theatrical release in the United States. It was released on Region 1 DVD on January 20, 2009. Struggling Hollywood film producer Charlie Berns is on the verge of suicide when his aspiring screenwriter nephew Lionel arrives from New Jersey with a script about 19th century British statesman Benjamin Disraeli. Charlie agrees to make the film, but only when he converts the literate PBS-style script (that he didn't read) into an action adventure Middle Eastern espionage film, \"Ben Disraeli: Freedom Fighter\". He casts power-star African American Bobby Mason, a recent convert to Judaism, in the title role and, after some creative wrangling with studio big-wigs and feisty project developer Deidre Hearn, whom he is instantly attracted to, he proceeds to set up production in South Africa. Charlie then lies to the studio, saying Bobby insists Deidre, who has purposely avoided Charlie, be sent to South Africa to assist on the production. She arrives, and she and Charlie eventually 'hook-up'. After Bobby is kidnapped by terrorists during the shoot, and the film is shut down, Deidre hatches a scheme to produce Lionel's original script 'on the Q.T.'. Using financing that must stay in Prague, Charlie and Deidre manage to film Lionel's original movie there, which goes on to receive seven Golden Globe nominations, making Charlie and Deidre the newest power couple producers in Hollywood. In his review in \"Variety\", Peter Debruge said, \"The characters seem to be doing all the laughing, while the general public has nothing to cling to but the horndog flirtation between mismatched leads William H. Macy and Meg Ryan - hardly ideal ingredients for mainstream success . . .",
"Service (film) Service () is a 2008 Filipino independent drama film directed by Brillante Mendoza and stars Gina Pareño as the matriarch of the Pineda family who owns a porn cinema in Angeles City. The film competed for the Palme d'Or in the main competition at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. It is also the first Filipino film to compete at the main competition in Cannes, since Lino Brocka's \"Bayan Ko: Kapit sa Patalim\" in 1984. \"Service\" is a drama that follows the daily life of the Pineda family in the Philippine city of Angeles. Bigamy, unwanted pregnancy, possible incest and skin diseases are all part of their daily challenges, but the real \"star\" of the show is an enormous, dilapidated movie theater that is both family business and home. In the past a prestigious place, the theater now features soft core porn and serves as a meeting ground for male & female prostitutes of every conceivable persuasion. The film captures the sordid, decaying atmosphere, interweaving various family drama with the comings and goings of customers, thieves and even a runaway farm animal while enveloping the viewer in a cacophony of city sound, noise and continuous pumping motion. Brillante Mendoza recounted how difficult it was to find the actress for the role of Merly, partly because of the scene in which she had to have real penetrative sex on camera: \"I couldn't think of a young actress from mainstream movies who can do what the role required, so I held an audition for the role of Merly. I wanted someone who's not interested in becoming a \"movie star,\" I wanted a real artist who can give justice to the role, and I saw that in Mercedes Cabral. The first thing I asked is if she would trust me to shoot this somewhat graphic love scene with Coco. She said it wasn't a problem.\" Brillante Mendoza said the scene in which Jewel (played by teenage actress Roxanne Jordan), is naked in front of a mirror, wasn't in the script. The film was shot in just 12 days. \"Service\" caused a stir in the Philippines with its loud ambient noise and its graphic depiction of sex and nudity. Submitted to the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board for public exhibition in 2008, the movie survived with two major cuts to sex scenes and was rated an R18.",
"Il Contratto Il Contratto (also known as 'The Contract') is a 1953 Australian film from Giorgio Mangiamele and Italian migrants in Australia. It was completed within a year of Mangiamele's arrival in Australia from Italy. Four young single Italian men (Giuseppe Michelini, Luigi Borsi, Giuseppe Cusato, Giorgio Mangiamele) travel to Melbourne by boat. Their trip was financed by loans from a travel agency, attracted by an Australian government scheme that promises them two years' guaranteed employment. They settle in inner-city accommodation, but find it impossible to obtain work in the midst of Australia's 1952–53 recession. Together with a woman friend, the men move to a farm outside Melbourne. After some initial setbacks, they earn enough money to pay off the agency loans.",
"The Country Teacher The Country Teacher () is a 2008 Czech drama film directed and written by Bohdan Sláma.",
"Mapule's Choice Mapule's Choice, is a 2008 Mosotho short film directed by Kaizer Matsumunyane and produced by Tumelo Matobako. The film deals with life of Mapule, a young garment worker from Maseru who must choose between keeping a secret and saving herself. The film was screened and officially selected at Zanzibar International Film Festival in 2009.",
"Lease Wife Lease Wife () is a 2006 drama film directed by Lu Xuechang, and is the story of a man who pays a prostitute to pretend to be his wife when he goes back to his village to visit his family. It is also known as The Contract. \"Lease Wife\" is Lu's fourth feature film and stars Li Jiaxuan as the prostitute, Lily, and Pan Yueming as the businessman, Guo Jiaju, who hires her.",
"The Contract (1971 film) The Contract ( \"\", lit. \"Katz and Karasso\") is a 1971 Israeli comedy film directed and written by Menahem Golan and produced by Yoram Globus. The film is in the Bourekas film genre. It sold 885,000 tickets and is the 6th most-watched Israeli film ever. Ashkenazi Shmuel Katz (Shmuel Rodensky) and Sephardic Kasosh Carasso (Joseph Shiloach) are feuding insurance brokers, competing for a big oil insurance contract. Katz has two daughters, the older Naomi (Efrat Lavie) and the younger Tiki (Nitza Shaul), while Carraso has two sons, Joseph (Osi) (Yehuda Barkan) and Eliyahu (Yahu) (Gadi Yagil). In order to win the contract, Katz sends his Naomi while Carasso sends Osi to Eilat in order to seduce the womanizing Mr. Israel Israeli (Yehuda Efroni). While Mr. Israeli pursue Daniela, a friend of Osi (Tzipi Levine) the two connect and fall for each other. In the meantime, in Tel Aviv, Yahu, who still lives with his parents and strive to have his own place, runs away from home and find himself stranded in a coffeehouse, where he is harassed by a group of young partiers. He is saved by Tiki, who shelters him for the night. Mr. Israeli arrives to Tel Aviv, where he expects to party and is promised a good time by both Naomi and Osi, although the two set a date for themselves and abandon Mr. Israeli on his own. Tiki and Eliyahu set a party for their friends in Osi's apartment, which Mr. Israeli joins. When both Katz and Carraso find about their offspring connecting, both react angrily. Katz, along with Mr. Israeli's wife crash the party and Tiki and Eliyahu run away on his bike, and once it break down, hitch-hike their way to Eilat, while Osi and Naomi continue their date with an all-night drive in the same direction. Tiki and Eliyahu find themselves in a Hippie village where they are arrested by the police in accusation of using drugs. Upon learning of their arrest both families head to Eilat to save their children, while the fathers quarrel on the way.",
"The Last Contract The Last Contract () is a 1998 Swedish thriller film directed by Kjell Sundvall. It is a work of fiction about the circumstances surrounding the actual murder of the Swedish Social Democratic Prime Minister Olof Palme on 28 February 1986. A Swedish police officer (played by Mikael Persbrandt) discovers the plan to assassinate Palme and tries to prevent it. The film also stars Pernilla August, Reine Brynolfsson and Cecilia Ljung. The film is based on a novel by an anonymous writer, who used the pseudonym \"John W. Grow\", which suggests that a British professional assassin (played by Michael Kitchen) was hired to kill Olof Palme. The film suggests that a British professional hit-man was hired by the CIA to assassinate the Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, because of Palme's stance on nuclear weapons in Scandinavia . The hit-man (Michael Kitchen) works for money alone and is very careful. He finds a Norwegian man (Bjørn Floberg) that hates the Swedish P.M. He also involves a man to be blamed (this character is \"Christer Pettersson\", first convicted (by a disagreeing court ) of the real assassination, but later acquitted in the appealing court. The Norwegian man kills Palme just as his wife notices Christer Pettersson. Soon afterwards the hitman kills the killer, and all traces pointing to the professional hitman are gone."
] |
[] |
[
"India"
] |
Are the movies Tension at Table Rock and The Sleep Room, from the same country?
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The Sleep Room The Sleep Room is a 1998 Canadian television movie about experiments on Canadian mental patients that were carried out in the 1950s and 1960s by Donald Ewen Cameron and funded by the CIA's MKUltra program. It originally aired as a miniseries and is based on the book "In The Sleep Room: The Story of CIA Brainwashing Experiments in Canada" by Anne Collins. The first half of the film details the evolution of Cameron's experiments using a procedure he called psychic driving which included continuous loop taped messages while the patients were under the influence of curare and LSD, as well as intensive electroshock treatments. The second half covers the legal efforts of the patients and their attorneys in the 1980s to obtain a settlement. The film was directed by Anne Wheeler and starred Leon Pownall, Macha Grenon, Nicola Cavendish, Donald Moffat, Diego Matamoros and Marina Orsini. It won several Gemini awards, including best television movie, best direction, best performance, best sound, and outstanding special effects in make-up. Dr. Ewen Cameron, as the head of the Allan Memorial Institute in Quebec, Canada, was interested in the repatterning of the brains of those with mental illnesses. He hypothesized that mental illness could be attributed to learning the wrong responses to situations. Cameron's study aimed to de-pattern the brain into an essentially infantile state, before re-patterning the brain to learn the correct responses to situations. The infantile state included a loss of the ability to speak, walk or control one's bowels and was generally irreversible. Cameron's primary method of de-patterning the brain was to place patients in a medically induced coma for several weeks at a time, while delivering powerful electric shocks used to further disorient the brain. This effectively wiped the minds and memories of many of his patients and is one of the greatest ethical dilemmas of this study.
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[
"Where Trouble Sleeps Where Trouble Sleeps is a play written by Catherine Bush that takes place in the 1950s on the other side of Travelers Rest, South Carolina about a carjacker who robs Blaine's Store for a hidden treasure chest. The play is an adaptation of a Clyde Edgerton story. The first part of the play details the carjacker's hits in other cities.",
"Bunker Palace Hôtel Bunker Palace Hôtel is a 1989 French post-apocalyptic film by comics artist Enki Bilal. In the imaginary dictatorship of a futuristic world, rebellion has broken out. The men in power scramble to the 'Bunker Palace Hotel', a safehouse built long ago for this contingency. A rebel spy sneaks in and observes the raving of the powerful and decadent inhabitants. They wonder what has happened to their leader, who has not arrived. The film was filmed in Belgrade, Serbia.",
"War Room (film) War Room is a 2015 American Christian drama film directed by Alex Kendrick and written by him and Stephen Kendrick. It is the Kendrick brothers' fifth film and their first through their subsidiary, Kendrick Brothers Productions. The film was produced by Provident Films, Affirm Films and TriStar Pictures in partnership with the Kendrick brothers. The film was released by Sony Pictures Releasing in North American theaters on August 28, 2015, and received generally negative reviews from critics, but became a box office success and a sleeper hit, grossing $74 million worldwide including $67.8 million domestically to become the 7th highest-grossing Christian film in the United States. Pharmaceutical salesman Tony Jordan and his wife, realtor Elizabeth Jordan, appear outwardly successful; they have a large house, plenty of money, and a beautiful daughter named Danielle. Behind the façade, however, Tony and Elizabeth's relationship is strained. Tony is callous, verbally abusive and thinking about cheating on Elizabeth. In addition, because his job requires frequent travel, he is almost never there for his daughter. Elizabeth goes to work with the elderly Miss Clara to sell her house. Miss Clara senses the stress Elizabeth is under, and suggests that Elizabeth fight for their marriage by praying for Tony. Miss Clara shows Elizabeth a special closet she has dedicated to praying, which she calls her \"War Room\"; as she puts it, \"in order to stand up and fight the enemy, you need to get on your knees and pray.\" As Elizabeth starts to seriously pray for her husband, Tony leaves for a business trip, having dinner with a beautiful woman who invites him back to her apartment. Just as he is about to leave with her, he becomes nauseous and runs to the bathroom to throw up. Shortly afterward, Tony is fired for stealing drug samples; unbeknownst to Elizabeth and Danielle, he has been illegally selling those stolen samples to make even more money. Realizing he has hit rock bottom, Tony rededicates his life to God. He now realizes that he has to return both the stolen samples and his ill-gotten money, even though revealing what he's done could potentially send him to prison. Tony meets with his former boss and confesses; his former boss is moved by his willingness to admit his wrongdoing and make amends, and decides not to press charges.",
"Reach the Rock Reach the Rock is a 1998 American comedy drama film directed by William Ryan and starring William Sadler and Alessandro Nivola. It was written and produced by John Hughes. A small-town troublemaker (Alessandro Nivola), directionless and alienated, ends up spending a night in a jail cell, where he and the police chief (William Sadler) engage in a battle of wills and wit. Writer/producer John Hughes originally offered the \"Reach the Rock\" script to director Chris Columbus at the same time he offered him \"Home Alone\". Columbus opted to direct the latter. The soundtrack featured a compilation of Chicago-based post-rock artists, among them Tortoise and associated acts Bundy K. Brown, The Sea and Cake and John McEntire. It was released on Hefty Records, a label owned and operated by John Hughes III, the son of John Hughes. The film gets its title from a song by the band Havana 3am.",
"The Guest Room (film) The Guest Room () is a 2021 Italian thriller-drama film directed by Stefano Lodovichi.",
"The Room (song) \"The Room\" is a song by Scottish indie rock band The Twilight Sad. The song was released as the third single from the band's second studio album, \"Forget the Night Ahead\". It was released on 5 April 2010 on Fat Cat Records. The song features violin by Laura McFarlane, of fellow Scottish band My Latest Novel, and was the first song to be written for the record. \"The Room\" was first released as an acoustic version, under the title \"Untitled #27\", on the band's 2008 compilation album \"Killed My Parents and Hit the Road\". The title of the song was inspired by the 2003 Tommy Wiseau movie, \"The Room\". The B-side of the single is an acoustic version of \"The Neighbours Can't Breathe\", a song also featured on \"Forget the Night Ahead\". The video for the song premiered on 25 February 2010 on \"The Line of Best Fit\". It was directed by Nicola Collins, whose filmmaking work includes the award-winning documentary \"The End\". The video features David Lynch's granddaughter in the starring role.",
"Black Rock (2012 film) Black Rock is a 2012 American horror-thriller film directed by Katie Aselton, with a screenplay by her husband Mark Duplass. The film premiered on January 21, 2012 at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival and was released theatrically on May 17, 2013. \"Black Rock\" stars Aselton, Lake Bell, and Kate Bosworth as three friends who reunite after years apart on a remote island but end up having to fight for their lives. Sarah (Kate Bosworth) invites her childhood friends, Abby (Katie Aselton) and Lou (Lake Bell), to a remote island that they once spent time at in their youth, in hopes of bringing their distant group back together. Though Abby and Lou are reluctant, they go with Sarah to the island. While there, they use a hand drawn map to try to find a time capsule they had buried as kids. They give up after Abby picks a fight with Lou over Lou having slept with her boyfriend years ago, something Abby has never gotten over and which ruined their friendship. On their first night while camping on the beach, they run into Henry (Will Bouvier), Derek (Jay Paulson) and Alex (Anslem Richardson), three veteran soldiers who are hunting on the island. Lou recognizes Henry as the younger brother of a former classmate and Abby invites the three to camp with them. While drunk, Abby flirts with Henry and eventually draws him into the woods to make out. When she tries to stop, Henry becomes aggressive and tries to rape her. Abby hits him in the head with a large rock. Hearing Abby's screams, the rest of the group come running and find Henry dead. Abby tries to explain what happened but the men don't believe her and become enraged that she's murdered their best friend. Derek and Alex knock the three women unconscious. When they wake, they are tied together by the wrists on the beach. Derek, the more aggressive of the two men, is adamant about killing them, but Alex tries to stop him. Abby goads Derek into letting her go so they can fight hand-to-hand. When he does, Lou tackles him as Sarah throws sand at Alex's face to prevent him from attacking. The three women then separately escape and hide, and the two men vow to kill them. After hiding separately, they meet up at a childhood fort and decide to wait until nightfall before trying to reach their boat.",
"Sleepwalking (film) Sleepwalking is a 2008 American drama film starring Nick Stahl, AnnaSophia Robb, Charlize Theron (who also produces the film), Woody Harrelson and Dennis Hopper. It centers on the bonding of a 30-year-old man and his 12-year-old niece after she is abandoned by her mother. The girl is taken in by the state after he loses his job and apartment. The two then depart on a road trip to his father's farm, a place he and his sister never intended to go back to. 'Sleepwalking' was an original screenplay by Zac Stanford and was the directorial debut of William Maher. Shooting began in October, 2006 in Moose Jaw and Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada under the working title \"Ferris Wheel\". It was filmed on a 29-day shooting schedule often under sub-zero conditions. The film featured the song \"Come On, Come Out\" by A Fine Frenzy. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2008, and was given a limited release in theaters beginning on March 14, 2008. Tara Reedy and her reckless mother Joleen have been evicted from the house where they were staying with Joleen's latest boyfriend, who was arrested for growing marijuana. Tara is forced to follow Joleen as she begs her younger brother, James, to take them in. Shortly after moving into James' apartment, Joleen runs off with a truck driver, leaving Tara with her uncle, who works with a road-building crew. After missing too many days of work, he is fired, and ends up crashing in the basement of his married best friend, Randall, after Tara has been sent to a foster home. Longing to be reunited with Tara, James goes to visit her, and she tells him she's being bullied in the foster home and asks him to take her away. James drives Tara to his childhood home, which he and Joleen had fled from many years earlier. James and Tara agree to pose as father and daughter during the road trip, and begin to develop a familial bond. Upon arriving at the Reedy homestead, which has now become a run-down cattle and horse farm, they are immediately put to work as unpaid labor by the head of the household, Mr. Reedy. Mr. Reedy treats Tara with contempt, physically abusing her due to her inexperience with farming.",
"Hotel Room Hotel Room (also called David Lynch's Hotel Room) is an American drama anthology series that aired for three half-hour episodes on HBO on January 8, 1993, with a repeat the next night. Created by Monty Montgomery and David Lynch (who directed two episodes), each drama stars a different cast and takes place in hotel room number 603 of the New York City-based \"Railroad Hotel\", in the years 1969, 1992, and 1936, respectively. The three episodes were created to be shown together in the form of a feature-length pilot, with the hope that if they were well received, a series of episodes following the same stand-alone half-hour format would be produced later. Following a lukewarm reception, HBO chose to not produce more episodes. The series opens with the following narration, written and spoken by co-creator David Lynch: \"For a millennium, the space for the hotel room existed, undefined. Mankind captured it, and gave it shape and passed through. And sometimes when passing through, they found themselves brushing up against the secret names of truth.\" Each story stars a new cast, and takes place in a different year, but is confined in the room 603 of the Railroad Hotel, located in New York City. The same bellboy and maid are featured in each story, as if they do not age. Barry Gifford wrote and Lynch directed the first and third episodes; Lynch had previously adapted Gifford's \"Wild at Heart\" novel to film. Jay McInerney wrote and James Signorelli directed the second. The series was produced by Deepak Nayar, who had worked with Lynch on \"Wild at Heart\", \"\" and \"On the Air\", and executive produced by Monty Montgomery and Lynch. This was Peter Deming's second collaboration as cinematographer with Lynch after \"On the Air\". The music was composed, conducted and orchestrated by frequent Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti, while Lynch was responsible for the sound design. According to Gifford, HBO were trying to emulate the success of the anthology series \"Tales from the Crypt\", but \"they wanted sexier or comedic pieces, not serious sex and not satire exactly, but something else.\" Gifford wrote five scripts, of which HBO produced two. He retained the rights to all five of them, and has turned them into plays that have been performed in several states of the U.S.",
"In the Room (film) In the Room is a 2015 erotic drama film directed by Eric Khoo and written by Khoo and Jonathan Lim. The film stars Josie Ho, George Young, Daniel Jenkins, Koh Boon Pin, W Leon U, Show Nishino, Lawrence Wong, Nadia AR, and Ian Tan. The film comprises six different stories of couples in a single-room brothel at a hotel in Singapore, spread over several decades. The film is marked as Singapore's first erotic film. At the same time, Khoo downplays the film's erotic themes, calling its ode to the national cultural trends \"a look at Singapore through the decades. It's a homage to the country\". Khoo dedicated the film to the late horror writer Damien Sin, who wrote Khoo's career-launching \"Mee Pok Man\" (1995). Principal photography began on 3 September 2014 at the Infinite Studios in Singapore. The $800,000-budgeted film was produced by Nansun Shi and Zhao Wei Films, and distributed and financed by Distribution Workshop. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2015 and travelled to the San Sebastián International Film Festival, Busan International Film Festival and Singapore International Film Festival before the director withdrew his submission for a rating for the film from the Media Development Authority (MDA) as the MDA had deemed that two scenes exceeded the film classification guidelines. Khoo did not want any cuts for a commercial release of the film in Singapore and so the film was denied a commercial release as unrated films are not allowed for public release in Singapore. However, on 25 February 2016, the film was given a theatrical release in Singapore after an \"international version\" with subtle differences from the original was passed uncut with an R21 rating by the MDA. The story starts just after the surrender of the British to Japanese troops in Singapore in 1942. Six stories of six different Japanese, Thai, British, Chinese, and Korean couples are set in the same hotel room, spread over several decades. Nansun Shi is producing the $800,000 budgeted film along with Zhao Wei Films, and Eric Khoo is directing the film based on his own co-written script with Jonathan Lim. Distribution Workshop financed the film. Hong Kong actress Josie Ho stars in the film as a mama-san (a brothel owner)."
] |
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[
"no"
] |
Are Kheyrabad, Kuhestan and Farahabad-E Kheyl both located in the same country?
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Kheyrabad, Rostaq Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād) is a village in Kuhestan Rural District, Rostaq District, Darab County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 46, in 10 families.
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[
"Kheyrabad, Khonj Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād) is a village in Seyfabad Rural District, in the Central District of Khonj County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 48, in 9 families.",
"Kheyrabad, Fazl Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād) is a village in Fazl Rural District, in the Central District of Nishapur County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 34, in 9 families.",
"Farahabad-e Kheyl Farahabad-e Kheyl (, also Romanized as Faraḩābād-e Kheyl and Faraḩābād Kheyl; also known as Faraḩābād-e Khalīl) is a village in Mazkureh Rural District, in the Central District of Sari County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 277, in 79 families.",
"Kheyrabad, Sepidan Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād and Khairābād) is a village in Beyza Rural District, Beyza District, Sepidan County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 204, in 52 families.",
"Kheyrabad, Kuhpayeh Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād) is a village in Tudeshk Rural District, Kuhpayeh District, Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 36, in 10 families.",
"Kheyrabad, Qir and Karzin Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād and Khairābād) is a village in Fathabad Rural District, in the Central District of Qir and Karzin County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 127, in 40 families.",
"Farahabad, Kashan Farahabad (, also Romanized as Faraḩābād) is a village in Kuh Dasht Rural District, Neyasar District, Kashan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 13, in 4 families.",
"Kheyrabad Kheyrabad or Kheir Abad () may refer to:",
"Kheyrabad, Zarqan Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād and Khairābād; also known as Kheyrābād-e Golvār, Kheyrābād-e Maīād, Kheyrābād-e Mayāgh, and Kheyrābād-e Nāmī) is a village in Band-e Amir Rural District, Zarqan District, Shiraz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 274, in 72 families.",
"Kheyrabad, Arsanjan Kheyrabad (, also Romanized as Kheyrābād) is a village in Shurab Rural District, in the Central District of Arsanjan County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 169, in 33 families."
] |
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[
"yes"
] |
Are both Li Fang (Footballer) and Maurycy Popiel from the same country?
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Li Fang Li Fang may refer to:
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[
"Fang Zhouzi Fang Shimin (), better known by his pen name Fang Zhouzi (; born 28 September 1967), is a Chinese popular science writer who is primarily known for his campaign against pseudoscience and fraud in China. President and co-director of \"New Threads\"(), a publication and website that promotes Chinese culture to the general public, Fang's aggressive campaign against allegations of academic fraud has been hotly debated; while Fang's works have appeared in many Chinese publications, various Chinese scholars have accused him of vigilantism and of using populist rhetoric in academic research. In 2019, due to the security fund incident, Fang Zhouzi’s fraud associate Peng Jian lost both cases in the domestic finals. The verdict has been inquired, and the court ruled that Peng Jian will refund 3.1 million Yuan (USD $485247.03) donations and interest. Fang Zhouzi (real name Fang Shimin) was born in Zhangzhou, Fujian, China in September 1967. Fang stated that his pen name, \"Fang Zhouzi\", is derived from a classical Chinese expression for \"two ships sailing together\"; in his case, the two ships stand for science and literature. Fang graduated from University of Science and Technology of China in 1990 and enrolled in Michigan State University, where he obtained a Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1995. Fang then worked at various institutions as a postdoctoral researcher in molecular genetics. In the summer of 2010, after Fang questioned the efficacy of his surgical procedure and the accuracy of his curriculum vitae, urologist Xiao Chuanguo hired thugs to assault Fang in Beijing. Fang escaped with only minor cuts and bruises,<ref name=\"doi10.1038/467511a\"></ref> but believed it was an attempt to kill him. Xiao had sued Fang for libel five times in the past five years, winning one case, losing two and two further being undecided. The dispute between Fang and Xiao dated to the founding of the New Threads website, when Fang had used the website to question the accuracy of Xiao's application to the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Fang is married to Liu Juhua, a senior reporter at the state-controlled Xinhua News Agency. Fang is a permanent resident of the United States. When in the United States, he lives in San Diego. Fang is an active campaigner against what he perceives as fraud in the Chinese society.",
"Li Yajun Li Yajun may refer to:",
"Ma Li Ma Li may refer to:",
"Li Hongyang Li Hongyang may refer to:",
"Popielów Popielów may refer to:",
"Li Haoyuan Li Haoyuan (, born on April 10, 1989 in Shanxi) is a Chinese footballer (Midfielder).",
"Stefan Popiel Stefan Popiel (19 May 1896 – 22 December 1927) was a Polish footballer. He played in two matches for the Poland national football team in 1922 and 1923.",
"Zhu Fang Zhu Fang (born 2 October 1976) is a female Chinese-born table tennis player who now represents Spain. She competed at the 2008 Summer Olympics, reaching the second round of the singles competition. She also competed in the team competition. She was born in Beijing.",
"Li Peijing Li Peijing (born 22 May 1989 in Shaanxi) is a Chinese rifle shooter. She competed in the 50 m rifle 3 positions event at the 2012 Summer Olympics, where she placed 9th.",
"Ma Leilei Ma Leilei (; born March 22, 1989 in Tianjin) is a Chinese former footballer who last played for Newcastle Jets in the A-League. Ma Leilei joined top tier side Tianjin Teda F.C. in July 2008 and would make his debut for the club on September 21, 2008 in a league game against Shanghai Shenhua in a 1–1 draw where he came on as a substitute. After that game Ma would start to become a regular within the side and would go on to score his first two senior level goals in a 2009 AFC Champions League game on May 5, 2009 against Kawasaki Frontale in a 3–1 victory. After that game he was soon touted as the successor of club legend and former Chinese international Yu Genwei. In October 2016 he joined Australian club Newcastle Jets as part of owner Martin Lee's request that there will be Chinese players at the Jets. Ma confirmed his retirement in March 2020. China U-17"
] |
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[
"no"
] |
Who is younger, Niklas Olausson or Alex Otti?
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Niklas Olausson Niklas Olausson (born May 12, 1986) is a Swedish professional ice hockey forward. He is currently playing with EHC Visp in the Swiss League (SL). Olausson played three seasons abroad in the Swiss National League and Finnish Liiga, before returning to the SHL for a second stint with Luleå HF on 24 March 2017.
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[
"Christoffer Nordenrot Ola \"Christoffer\" Nordenrot, (born 9 March 1986) is a Swedish actor. He had the leading role of Alex in the film \"Den blomstertid nu kommer\" in 2018. Previously he has had roles in Kenny Begins, Wallander – Mordbrännaren and Sune – Best Man.",
"Noël Ott Noël Robin Ott (born 15 January 1994) is a Swiss beach soccer player who plays as a forward. Known for his pace across the sand and technical abilities in scoring many goals, Ott came to prominence in the sport in 2014, excelling during the European season; he was named best young player in the world that year. He followed this up by claiming the Bronze Ball at the 2015 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. Ott has since been described as an \"indispensable\" part of the Swiss national team and one of the \"5 to 10 best players in the world\", something that was officially recognised in 2017 as he was named as part of the world team of the year. He is regularly referred to as the \"Lionel Messi of beach soccer\". Ott was born in Sattel, Switzerland and raised in Wettingen of Aargau canton. Ott's father, a former amateur of the Swiss third division, inspired him to play association football as a child at six years old. Ott joined Swiss Super League side Grasshoppers as a youth in 2007 and advanced through their junior teams from the under-13s onwards. Meanwhile, aged 9, Ott had begun attending Swiss Beach Soccer youth camps. He was originally tutored by Stephan Meir and Moritz Jaggy, members of the Swiss national team Ott would ultimately play alongside of. He continued to be present at the training camps over the next decade. As a youth, it was clear to Swiss coach Angelo Schirinzi that Ott was a talented beach soccer player. Ott's prospects of becoming a professional footballer were dashed as he was rejected from progressing to Grasshoppers' upper youth teams. Following this rejection, Franziska Steinemann, future coach of the Switzerland women’s team and a friend of Ott's mother, invited him to play with club side Havana Shots Aargau of the Suzuki Swiss National Beach Soccer League. Ott debuted in the National League in 2009, aged 15. Initially, Ott attempted to continue his football career, joining FC Baden of the Swiss fourth tier for a year whilst also playing for Havana Shots; he made rapid progress with the latter. In his second season with Aargau in 2011, Ott was named \"rookie of the year\" and in the 2012 season, he was named best player and was the league's top scorer.",
"Niclas Andersén (footballer) Niclas Andersén (born 5 August 1992) is a Swedish footballer who plays for GAIS as a left-back.",
"Isak Magnusson Isak Magnusson (born 16 June 1998) is a Swedish footballer who plays for Östers IF.",
"Nicholas Otaru Nicholas Otaru (born 15 July 1986, Turku, Finland) is a Finnish retired professional football player. Otaru was born to a Nigerian father and a Finnish mother.",
"Mats Olsson Mats Olsson may refer to:",
"Magnus Olsson Magnus Olsson may refer to:",
"Alexander Berntsson Alexander Berntsson (born 30 March 1996) is a Swedish footballer who plays for Halmstads BK as a defender.",
"Johan Pettersson (footballer, born 1989) Johan Pettersson (born 8 September 1989) is a Dutch-born Swedish footballer who plays as a midfielder. He is a free agent and his latest club was GAIS. He is son of the former Ajax and Swedish national team player Stefan Pettersson.",
"Alex Otti Alex Otti (born February 18, 1965) is a Nigerian economist, banker, investor, philanthropist and politician. Otti is the former Group Managing Director of Diamond Bank Plc, a leading retail financial institution in Nigeria. Otti was a gubernatorial candidate of Abia State on the platform of All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). On 31 December 2015, The Court of Appeal which sat in Owerri removed Okezie Ikpeazu of the Peoples Democratic Party as governor of Abia State and declared Alex Otti of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, the winner of the April 11 and April 25 Governorship elections in the state. However, on February 3, 2016, the Supreme Court of Nigeria reversed the verdict of the Court of Appeal and affirmed the election of Ikpeazu as Governor. Dr. Alex Otti is a member of the editorial board of one of the most respected newspapers in Nigeria, \"Thisday\", and writes a fortnightly column, every other Monday, titled \"Outside The Box\". Otti was born to the family of the late Pastor and Mrs. Lazarus Weze Otti at Umuru, Umuehim village in Ehi Na Uguru Ancient Kingdom, Isiala Ngwa South LGA of Abia State. He had his secondary school education at Ngwa High School, Aba and Secondary Technical School, Okpuala Ngwa in Abia State, where he finished as the best student in his set during the school certificate examinations. He thereafter proceeded to the University of Port Harcourt for his university education, where he graduated with a First Class honors degree in economics in 1988. Otti earned an MBA degree from the University of Lagos in 1994. He has attended various international courses including the Executive Development Programmes of the Columbia Business and Stanford Business School and Wharton Business School (University of Pennsylvania). He also did an executive programme at INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France. In 2009 he was conferred with an honorary doctorate degree by Babcock University and in 2012, an honorary Doctor of Science (D.Sc.) Degree by the University of Port Harcourt. In 2013, he received another honorary doctorate degree from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. Otti began his banking career in 1989 with the Nigerian International Bank, a subsidiary of Citibank New York, where he worked in the operations department."
] |
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[
"Niklas Olausson"
] |
Where did the director of film Fisherman'S Wharf (Film) study?
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David Rimmer David Rimmer (born January 20, 1942, in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian experimental film director. Rimmer studied economics and mathematics at the University of British Columbia (UBC), graduating in 1963. For the next two years he traveled around the world, which led him to decide that he was not interested on pursuing a career in business. Returning to Canada in 1965, he did a make-up year at the UBC to receive a degree in English. In 1967 he took a short filmmaking course from Stan Fox, a producer at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). Rimmer dropped out of graduate school at Simon Fraser University (SFU) in 1968 to become an artist. With Fox's support and a supply of rough film stock from the CBC, he made his first film, "Knowplace", which was broadcast on the CBC. Inspired by Stan Brakhage's films and writings, he made his first important experimental films, "Square Inch Field" and "Migration", in 1968 and 1969 respectively. Rimmer moved temporarily to New York City from 1971 to 1974, and worked with such vanguard artists as Yvonne Rainer. When he returned to Canada in 1974 he created the two landmark films "Canadian Pacific" (1974) and "Canadian Pacific II" (1975). Since 1979, with the release of "Al Neil / A Portrait", he has made innovative documentaries sometimes in film and sometimes in video. In the early eighties, Rimmer took a four-year hiatus from filmmaking to teach film and video at SFU. Rimmer has worked extensively with contact and optical printing as well as videographics. Gene Youngblood of "ArtsCanada" magazine has said ""Surfacing on the Thames" is a brilliant film which, in its way, belongs in the same class as Snow's "Wavelength". I've never seen anything like it ... the ultimate metaphysical movie." In 2011 David Rimmer won the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts. Since 2012, Rimmer's extant film originals have been housed in the collection of the Academy Film Archive in Los Angeles, where many of his works have been preserved and restored. Storm Bay (British Columbia)
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[
"Joe Wright Joseph Wright (born 25 August 1972) is a British film director residing in Somerset, England. His motion pictures include the literary adaptations \"Pride & Prejudice\" (2005) and \"Anna Karenina\" (2012), the romantic war drama \"Atonement\" (2007), the action thriller \"Hanna\" (2011), Peter Pan origin story \"Pan\" (2015), and \"Darkest Hour\" (2017), a political drama following Winston Churchill during World War II nominated for Best Picture. Wright always had an interest in the arts, especially painting. He would also make films on his Super 8 camera as well as spend time in the evenings acting in a drama club. Wright is dyslexic. He went to Islington Green Secondary School, but left without any GCSEs. He began his career working at his parents' puppet theatre, the Little Angel Theatre in Islington. He also took classes at the Anna Scher Theatre School and acted professionally on stage and camera. He spent an art foundation year at Camberwell College of Arts, before taking a degree in fine art and film at Central St Martins where he was tutored by Malcolm Le Grice and Vera Neubauer. In his last year of studies he received a scholarship to make a short film for the BBC that won several awards. During the 1990s, he worked at Oil Factory, a music video production company based in Caledonian Road, Kings Cross. He worked on a variety of productions in numerous roles, including casting director. Here he was able to get the opportunity to direct some music videos. Alongside this, particularly on the strength of his short film work, he was also developing \"The End\", his second short film. During this decade Wright also worked part-time as a roadie for Vegetable Vision who created visuals for various electronic music bands, such as Chemical Brothers, Darren Emerson, Underworld and Andrew Weatherall. He attributes some of the aesthetic and emotion of the UK rave scene as an influence on his work. On the success of his first short film, he was offered the script for the serial \"Nature Boy\" (2000). He followed this up with the serials \"Bodily Harm\" (2002) with Timothy Spall and the highly acclaimed \"\" (2003) with Rufus Sewell which won the BAFTA Award for Best Drama Serial.",
"Alister Grierson Alister Grierson (born 1969) is an Australian film director and scriptwriter. Born in Canberra, he completed his secondary schooling at Canberra Grammar, graduated in Economics and Arts from the Australian National University and studied Japanese in Tokyo. As an under 18 Australian Rules player, he represented the ACT in the Teal Cup but later switched codes to Rugby, playing 1st grade both for his school and the ANU. Whilst at university, his interest in film-making developed, and he later gained a Master of Arts in Directing at AFTRS. He has shot 15 short films winning three Tropfest awards and is the director of the feature film, \"Kokoda\", which he co-wrote. In 2009, Grierson was invited to the \"Avatar\" set during shooting by James Cameron, and was selected to direct a 3D cave-diving drama \"Sanctum\", using the Cameron-developed Fusion Camera System. The script is inspired by the near-death experience of one of the writers, Andrew Wight, who was trapped in a cave collapse under the Nullarbor Plain. It was shot at Warner Roadshow Studios on the Queensland Gold Coast, and the film opened 4 February 2011. By mid-March the film had joined the top ten Worldwide Box Office Results (Australian Films): All Time, in ninth position. The worldwide gross had reached $108,943,221 by 19 October 2011. He is the director of \"Parer's War\", starring Matthew Le Nevez and Adelaide Clemens, a dramatised biopic about Damien Parer for the ABC. Although set in Sydney (for the Australian locations), much of the filming was done in Queensland. The script, by Alison Nisselle, is an adaptation of Neil McDonald's book \"Damien Parer’s War\". Released on 27 April 2014, the film attracted the following comments from Graeme Blundell in the Australian: \"Parer’s War is taut, intelligently constructed and sharply executed by Grierson...\" and \"It’s all beautifully put together by Grierson...\" Grierson directed the final three episodes of both series of the award-winning ABC serial Nowhere Boys. He directed \"Tiger\", written by Michael Pugliese and Prem Singh. Mickey Rourke plays Frank Donovan in the film, which is produced by Mary Aloe, and co-stars Pugliese, Singh and Janel Parrish.",
"Mark M. Newell Mark M. Newell, Ph.D. RPA is a British/American underwater and terrestrial archaeologist and anthropologist, the director of the Georgia Archaeological Institute. He received his doctorate from St. Andrews University, Scotland. Newell began diving in Bermuda in 1963. While working as a journalist, he continued to dive throughout the Caribbean and South America, developing an interest in the archaeological potential of the sites he discovered. In 1996 he completed a Ph.D. in underwater archaeology at the Scottish Institute of Maritime Studies at the University of St. Andrews. Since 1983 Newell has specialized in the recording of underwater sites and historic sea-going and river craft of the Southern United States. He built two full-sized reproductions of historic craft in South Carolina and Georgia, and developed the first typography of historic working craft of the waterways of South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia. A former diving instructor with the National Association of Scuba Diving Schools, Newell was an early proponent of sport diver education Avocational marine archaeologists, Chriss Addams and Mike Davis, recovered artifacts from the anchorage of the prison hulk \"Dromedary\". The prison hulk been moored in the Naval Dockyard of Bermuda's Ireland Island in the mid-nineteenth century. Newell later reviewed data recorded by Addams and concluded that it was so competently gathered that it would support a master's degree in archaeology. With Newell's encouragement, Addams subsequently enrolled at the University of Ulster and completed an MSc in underwater archaeology using the Dromedary data. He is currently the only degreed underwater archaeologist working in Bermuda. The analysis of the Dromedary artifacts by Newell and Addams has provided unique insights into the lifeways of the hulk crew and inmates, their subsistence patterns and their economic activities. This work has now become the basis of a major exhibition on the British shipboard prison system staged by the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales at Hyde Park Barracks. A new article by Addams on coin forgery aboard the \"Dromedary\" while stationed in Bermuda (Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia, Vol 18) was recently awarded the prestigious Ray Jewell Medal for the best article from volumes 17 and 18. Newell participated in St. Andrews University's identification of the \"Resurgam\", the world's first practical powered submarine.",
"Charles Musser Charles John Musser (born 16 January 1951) is a film historian and documentary film maker. Since 1992 he has taught at Yale University, where he is currently a professor of Film and Media Studies as well as American Studies and Theater Studies. His research has focused on such topics as Edwin S. Porter and early cinema, Oscar Micheaux and race cinema of the silent era, Paul Robeson and film performance as well as a variety of issues and individuals in documentary. His films include \"An American Potter\" (1976), \"Before the Nickelodeon: The Early Cinema of Edwin S. Porter\" (1982) and \"Errol Morris: A Lightning Sketch\" (2014). Musser was born in Stamford, Connecticut and grew up in Old Greenwich and Riverside. The son of Robert John Musser, who worked for Union Carbide, and his wife the former Marilyn Keach, he has two sisters, Nancy Musser (Sutton) and Jane Musser (Nelson). His grandfather, John Musser, was chair of the History Department and later Dean of Graduate School at NYU. Musser attended St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire, where he took Public Affairs courses with Gerry Studds. He also apprenticed to local studio potter Gerry Williams, a former conscientious objector whose father was close friends with Gandhi. Studds and Williams did much to shape his political consciousness in the late 1960s. He won the school's history prize his senior year. In the fall of 1969, he became a Yale freshman as its undergraduate college admitted women for the first time. He created his own major in film studies and, took classes with Jay Leyda, Standish Lawder, Murray Lerner, David Milch, Michael Roemer and Peter Demetz. His wrote his first film paper on Dziga Vertov's \"Man with a Movie Camera\" and his senior thesis was entitled \"Russian Formalism and Early Soviet Film Theory\". Musser left Yale in 1972, moving to New York City to work in the film industry. After a series of short jobs, he was hired to work on \"Hearts and Minds\" in September 1972 and eventually became the first assistant editor. In New York he worked with and learned from producer/director Peter Davis, Richard Pierce and Tom Cohen then followed the film to Los Angeles and assisted editors Lynzee Klingman and Susan Morse. He subsequently graduated from Yale in 1975.",
" Mann studied English literature at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. While a student, he saw Stanley Kubrick's \"Dr. Strangelove\" and fell in love with movies. In an \"L.A. Weekly\" interview, he described the film's impact on him: Mann graduated from Wisconsin with a B.A. in 1965. In 1967 he earned a M.A. from the London Film School. His daughter Ami Canaan Mann is also a film director and producer. Mann later moved to London in the mid 1960s to go to graduate school in cinema. He went on to receive a graduate degree at the London Film School in 1967. He spent seven years in the United Kingdom going to film school and then working on commercials along with contemporaries Alan Parker, Ridley Scott and Adrian Lyne. In 1968, footage he shot of the Paris student revolt for a documentary, \"Insurrection\", aired on NBC's \"First Tuesday\" news program and he developed his '68 experiences into the short film \"Jaunpuri\" which won the Jury Prize at Cannes in 1970. Mann returned to United States after divorcing his first wife in 1971. He went on to direct a road trip documentary, \"17 Days Down the Line\". Three years later, \"Hawaii Five-O\" veteran Robert Lewin gave Mann a shot and a crash course on television writing and story structure. Mann wrote four episodes of \"Starsky and Hutch\" (three in the first series and one in the second) and the pilot episode for \"Vega$\". Around this time, he worked on a show called \"Police Story\" with cop-turned-novelist Joseph Wambaugh. \"Police Story\" concentrated on the detailed realism of a real cop's life and taught Mann that first-hand research was essential to bring authenticity to his work. Mann also wrote an early draft of the 1978 film \"Straight Time\". His first feature movie was a television special called \"The Jericho Mile\", which was released theatrically in Europe. It won the Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Limited Series or a Special in 1979 and the DGA Best Director award. His television work also includes being the executive producer on \"Miami Vice\" and \"Crime Story\".",
"David Twohy David Neil Twohy ( ; born October 18, 1955) is an American film director and screenwriter. Twohy was born in Los Angeles County, California. He attended college at California State University, Long Beach, graduating with a degree in radio/television/film. His most notable filmmaking credits have been writing \"The Fugitive\", \"Waterworld\", and \"GI Jane\", but he is mostly known for writing and directing \"The Arrival\" and most entries in \"Chronicles of Riddick\". He has a cameo in \"Below\" as the British captain of the rescue ship.",
"Alex Cox Alexander B. H. Cox (born 15 December 1954) is an English film director, screenwriter, actor, nonfiction author and broadcaster. Cox experienced success early in his career with \"Repo Man\" and \"Sid and Nancy\", but since the release and commercial failure of \"Walker\", his career has moved towards independent films. Cox received a co-writer credit for the screenplay of Terry Gilliam's \"Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas\" (1998) for previous work on the script before it was completely rewritten by Gilliam. As of 2012, Cox has taught screenwriting and film production at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Cox was born in Bebington, Cheshire, England in 1954. He attended Worcester College, Oxford, and later transferred to the University of Bristol where he majored in film studies. Cox secured a Fulbright Scholarship, allowing him to study at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he graduated from the School of Theater, Film and Television with an MFA. Cox began reading law as an undergraduate at Oxford University, but left to study radio, film and TV at Bristol University, graduating in 1977. Seeing difficulties in the British film scene at the time, he first went to Los Angeles to attend film school at UCLA in 1977. There he produced his first film, \"Edge City\" (also known as \"Sleep Is for Sissies\"), a 40-minute surreal short about an artist struggling against society. After graduation, Cox formed Edge City Productions with two friends with the intention of producing low-budget feature films. He wrote a screenplay for \"Repo Man\", which he hoped to produce for a budget of $70,000, and began seeking funding. Michael Nesmith agreed to produce \"Repo Man\", and convinced Universal Studios to back the project with a budget of over a million dollars. During the course of the film's production, the studio's management changed, and the new management had far less faith in the project. The initial cinema release was limited to Chicago, followed by Los Angeles, and was short-lived. After the success of the soundtrack album (notable for featuring many popular LA punk bands), there was enough interest in the film to earn a re-release in a single cinema in New York City, but only after becoming available on video and cable. Nevertheless, it ran for 18 months, and eventually earned $4,000,000.",
"Stephanie Rothman Stephanie Rothman (born November 9, 1936, in Paterson, New Jersey) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter, known for her low-budget independent exploitation films made in the 1960s and 1970s, especially \"The Student Nurses\" (1970) and \"Terminal Island\" (1974). Rothman was raised in Los Angeles and studied sociology at UC Berkeley. She says she became interested in filmmaking after seeing \"The Seventh Seal\" (1957), \"what is still my favorite film of all time... I didn't, at that point, know how to become a filmmaker. I didn't even think it was possible. When I saw it I thought to myself, 'This is what I would like to do. I would like to make a film like this.' Highly thoughtful, European-like, [laughs] small films. I wanted to be a writer-director.\" From 1960 to 1963, Rothman studied filmmaking at the University of Southern California where she was mentored by the chairman of the cinema department, Bernard Cantor. She became the first woman to be awarded the Directors Guild of America fellowship, awarded annually to the director of a student film. This, along with her academic qualifications, garnered her a job offer from Roger Corman in 1964, to work as his assistant. (Corman chose her over another applicant, who later became his wife Julie.) \"It was rare for anyone who did not have family connections to find employment in the film industry, in or outside of the jurisdiction of the labor unions\", recalled Rothman later. \"It was even rarer for a woman to be hired. It was traditional to exclude us from nearly all types of work behind the camera.\" Rothman worked in a variety of jobs for Corman, on films such as \"Beach Ball\" (1965), \"Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet\" (1965), and \"Queen of Blood\" (1966). Rothman: I did everything: write new scenes, scout locations, cast actors, direct new sequences and edit final cuts. It was a busy, exhilarating time. Roger did not teach me these skills, I learned them in film school. But he did share his greater experience with me, giving me useful criticism and, equally important, information on how to efficiently organize work on the set so that a film could be shot on schedule.",
"Frank Prinzi Frank Prinzi is an American cinematographer and director. He earned his degree from New York University.",
"Gale Tattersall Gale Tattersall (born 1948) is a British filmmaker, cinematographer and founder of the HDD SLR Workshops in Santa Monica, California. He was the cinematographer for such movies as \"The Commitments\" and \"Tank Girl\" and the director of photography on 120 \"House\" episodes. He is currently mentoring upcoming filmmakers on the art of cinematography and film making. Tattersall's childhood and education were split between the outskirts of Liverpool, England, and boarding school in Darjeeling, India, his father being an engineer at a steel company in Mumbai (then called Bombay). At the age of sixteen, he left home in Liverpool to make his life in London. The beginnings of his journey to becoming a filmmaker started as a photographer at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. A visit by Buckminster Fuller, the renowned American architect and philosopher, in the summer of 1967, caused him to pick up a Bolex camera to document his visit. He became so enchanted by the film making process that he enrolled at the London Film School for its two-year course. At graduation, he received a grant from the British Film Institute to make a short film called \"Value For Money\", inspired by a dream and featuring Quentin Crisp, later to become famous for \"The Naked Civil Servant\". Tattersall has been nominated for the Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for a Miniseries or a Movie for his work on the Ron Howard-produced 1998 docudrama miniseries \"From the Earth to the Moon\". He was twice nominated for the American Society of Cinematographers Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Regular Series for the \"House M.D.\" episodes \"House's Head\" and \"Meaning\". Tattersall has two grown sons, Rio and Sunny with his Brazilian ex-wife, Teresa."
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"Harvard University"
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Where was the director of film Symphony Of Silence born?
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Symphony of Silence Symphony of Silence (); is a 2001 Armenian film directed by Vigen Chaldranyan. It was Armenia's submission to the 74th Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, but was not accepted as a nominee.
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"Russian Symphony Russian Symphony ( Russkaya simfoniya) is a 1994 Russian drama film directed by Konstantin Lopushansky and starring Viktor Mikhaylov. The narrative is set in a dark version of contemporary Russia where the world seems to be coming to an end through a flood. A man is desperate to do something good with his life before it ends, but is mostly met with suspicion. The film ties in thematically with Lopushansky's other apocalyptic films, \"Dead Man's Letters\" (1986), \"A Visitor to a Museum\" (1989) and \"The Ugly Swans\" (2006), and is the most overtly religious of them. It played in the Forum section of the 45th Berlin International Film Festival and received the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury.",
"Symphony of a City Symphony of a City () is a 1947 Swedish documentary short film about Stockholm, directed by Arne Sucksdorff. It won an Oscar in 1949 for Best Short Subject (One-Reel).",
"Silence (1971 film) Silence (, translit. \"Chinmoku\") is a 1971 Japanese historical drama film directed by Masahiro Shinoda, based on the novel of the same name by Shūsaku Endō. It stars Tetsurō Tamba, Mako, Eiji Okada, and Shima Iwashita alongside English actors David Lampson and Don Kenny. Endo co-wrote the screenplay with Masahiro Shinoda. Most of the film's dialogue is in Japanese, though it has short sequences in English. It was entered Un Certain Regard into the 1972 Cannes Film Festival, and won four Mainichi Film Awards including Best Film and Best Director. The film's themes analyze the conflict of human nature versus divine requirements and their compatibility, life's purpose, the interplay of emotional needs, suffering, and contentment. The storytelling device the film uses is circumstantial and depicts the struggles of life, allegorical presentation, and Christian theology. It is the first of three movie adaptations of the novel, succeeded by the Portuguese Os Olhos da Ásia from 1996 and 2016 film of the same name directed by Martin Scorsese. In the 17th century, two Portuguese Jesuit priests, Rodrigo and Garrpe, travel to Japan to proselytize, where Christianity is officially banned. They also search for their mentor, Ferreira, with whom they lost contact five years prior and presume is imprisoned. Rodrigo is patronizing and Garrpe is cautious. The two priests are overwhelmed with the welcome they receive in Japan, but occasionally wish for some comfort food from home. They travel to the village of Kichijiro, the man who smuggled them into Japan from China. Returning, they hear the officials have arrived to capture the priests. After many of the hidden believers are taken prisoner, the two priests decide to leave but they become separated. Kichijiro finds Rodrigo and joins with him; he confesses to Rodrigo he is a weak person and his family was slaughtered for being Christians. Nagasaki Magistrate Inoue's men capture Rodrigo and throw 300 pieces of silver at Kichijiro (reminiscent of Judas Iscariot). He later gives away the money to a prostitute for emotional support. Inoue's men imprison Rodrigo and put him on trial.",
"Sea of Silence Sea of Silence () is a 2003 Belgian drama film directed by Stijn Coninx. It was selected as the Belgian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 76th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.",
"Michael Tyburski Michael Tyburski (born August 8, 1984) is an American film director and screenwriter, best known for directing \"The Sound of Silence\", which premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival. The film was acquired for international distribution by Sony Pictures Worldwide. and by IFC Films in the United States. His short film Palimpsest premiered at Sundance in 2013, where it won a Special Jury Award, and his short Actor Seeks Role was featured on The New Yorkers Screening Room series. In 2013, he was named amongst the \"25 New Faces of Independent Film\" by \"Filmmaker Magazine\". Tyburski was born and raised in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom and attended film school at the College of Santa Fe in New Mexico.",
"Stephan Brenninkmeijer Stephan Brenninkmeijer (born 27 June 1964 in Doorwerth) is a Dutch film director, screenwriter, and producer. Brenninkmeijer was born and raised at Doorwerth castle, Netherlands, where his father G.H. Brenninkmeijer was owner of the Michelin starred Restaurant Beaulieu. At the age of 8 his family moved to Apeldoorn. From 1988 to 1992 he studied at the Netherlands Film Academy in Amsterdam. Although aiming to direct feature films, he first focused on storytelling through editing. In 1992, he started his professional career editing television series and films. As an editor he worked with Dutch directors like Academy Award winner Mike van Diem. He directed his first feature film in 2000, \"The Silence of the Soul\", which won a \"Golden Crown\" Award at the ICVM festival in Atlanta, United States. The same year he co-directed the TV series \"Westenwind\" which won the Televizierring. In 2002 he wrote, produced and directed the motion picture \"Swingers\", a controversial low-budget production that had theatrical releases in the Benelux countries and was sold internationally. In 2011 he wrote, produced and directed the feature film \"Caged\". Caged was picked up by Anderson Digital for US home theatre release in February 2013. In 2012 Brenninkmeijer participated in the user-generated project Entertainment Experience with Paul Verhoeven to make his version on the user-generated script. Both Verhoeven's film (called \"Tricked\") and Brenninkmeijers \"Lotgenoten (Counterparts)\" were to be released in the Netherlands in March 2013. The Entertainment Experience tv-show won an International Emmy Award 2013.",
"Voice of Silence (2013 film) Voice of Silence () is a 2013 Iranian film written and directed by Mohammad Hadi Naeiji. The movie has won the Crystal Simorgh for Best Screenplay at the 32nd Fajr International Film Festival. It was produced by the award-winning writer and director Reza Mirkarimi the director of \"A Cube of Sugar\". Mir-Hashem is a young cleric whose wife has left him because of his angry creditors and his fertility problems. One of the creditors persuades Mir-Hashem to go for propagation and get the money from people.",
"John Bisharat John Bisharat is an American composer and conductor who has composed, arranged, and conducted music for film and television productions. Bisharat was born in 1964 in Los Angeles, California, and grew up playing the piano, cello, and bass. In 1986, he graduated from UCLA's Professional Designation in Film Scoring program. Bisharat has conducted various symphonies across the United States, including the National Symphony Orchestra, the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, and the Kansas City Symphony. Outside of the United States, he has conducted the London Symphony Orchestra. Bisharat has also worked on numerous musical scores for films, including the 1987 Charles Bronson film \"\", the 2006 Omar Sharif film \"One Night With the King\", and the 2004 short film \"The Trumpeter.\" He recently composed the score for the forthcoming film \"Magdalena: Released from Shame\" (2008).",
"The White Sound The White Sound () is the directorial debut of Austrian director Hans Weingartner, with co-director and screenplay writer Tobias Amann. The film was the idea of both students as part of a separate project at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne. The film premiere was at Cinenova-Kino in Cologne-Ehrenfeld and the film appeared throughout German cinemas on 31 January 2002. The film stars Daniel Brühl.",
"The Legion of Silence The Legion of Silence (Spanish:La legión del silencio) is a 1956 Spanish drama film directed by José María Forqué and José Antonio Nieves Conde and starring Jorge Mistral and Nani Fernández. The film's sets were designed by Sigfrido Burmann."
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"Yerevan"
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What is the cause of death of director of film Pájaro Loco?
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Pájaro loco Pájaro loco is a 1971 Argentine comedy film directed by Lucas Demare. It stars Luis Sandrini, María José Demare, Víctor Laplace and José Cibrián.
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"Manuel Summers Manuel Summers Rivero (26 March 1935 – 12 June 1993) was a Spanish film director, screenwriter and actor. Father of David Summers Rodríguez leading singer of Pop group Hombres G and of Cheyenne Summers, Spanish voice actress, and brother of journalist Guillermo Summers, was born in Seville and later made adoptive son of Lepe, Huelva. His family originated from England. He died in Sevilla on 12 June 1993 aged 58 from colorectal cancer. Filmography as Film Director: Filmography as actor: Filmography as producer: Filmography as screenwriter:",
" In 1988 he again won the best actor award in the San Sebastián International Film Festival, this time for his performance in two films: Francisco Regueiro's \"Diario de invierno\" and Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi's \"El Aire de un Crimen (The Hint of a Crime)\". Fernando Rey was also awarded the gold medal of the Spanish Movie Arts and Sciences Academy. In 1960, Rey married the Argentine actress Mabel Karr. They had a son, Fernando Casado Campolongo. In 1992 he became chairman of the Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España succeeding Antonio Giménez-Rico. He died of bladder cancer in Madrid on 9 March 1994. He was survived by his wife, who died on 1 May 2001 at Hospital Ramon Cajal from a generalized infection. On 25 September 2018 their son Fernando Casado confirmed she died from a sharp mediastinitis during the filming of a tv series named \"El Secreto\".",
"Ciro Durán Ciro Durán (16 December 1937 – 10 January 2022) was a Colombian screenwriter and film director. He died in Tobia on 10 January 2022, at the age of 84.",
"Ignacio F. Iquino Ignacio F. Iquino (Valls, Tarragona Province; October 25, 1910-Barcelona; April 24, 1994) was a Spanish film director, screenwriter, producer, cinematographer and editor. He was the son of theater and film composer and the actress Teresea Iquino. He's most commonly known as a writer/producer/director of several low-budget paella westerns (a Spanish version of a spaghetti western), the better known of which starred Richard Harrison and Fernando Sancho. Iquino also worked with some other minor stars of the time, such as Erika Blanc in \"Stagecoach of the Condemned\" (1970). He died in Barcelona on 29 April 1994 aged 83.",
"Terele Pávez Teresa Marta Ruiz Penella (29 July 1939 – 11 August 2017), better known as Terele Pávez, was a Spanish actress. She appeared in more than ninety films since 1954. She died on 11 August 2017 due to a stroke at the age of 78.",
"Pablo Krögh Pablo Willy Krögh Baraona (21 February 1963 – 2 September 2013) was a Chilean film, theater, television and voice actor. His credits included the Chilean films \"Machuca\" in 2004 and the 2009 dramatic film, \"Dawson Isla 10\", in which he portrayed the late politician, José Tohá. His television roles included the Chilevision telenovela series, \"La Doña\". He was currently starring in the TVN television series, \"Bim bam bum\", at the time of his death in 2013. Krögh died from tongue cancer in Santiago, Chile, at approximately 5:00 a.m. on 2 September 2013, at the age of 50. He had been diagnosed with tongue cancer in 2012. Numerous Chilean actors and directors posted tributes to Krögh on social media, including Ana Maria Gazmuri, Paula Sharim, Begoña Basauri, Lorena Capetillo, Herval Abreu and Daniel Alcaíno.",
"Juan López Moctezuma Juan López Moctezuma (May 19, 1932 – August 2, 1995) was a Mexican film director and actor. He was born in Mexico City in 1929. During his career he directed five films, all in the genres of supernatural horror and suspense: \"The Mansion of Madness\" (1973), \"Mary, Mary, Bloody Mary\" (1975), \"To Kill a Stranger\" (1984), \"El Alimento del Miedo\" (1994), and his most recognized and controversial work, \"Alucarda\" (1977), which tells the story of a satanic possession in a Catholic convent. In 1993 he was admitted to a psychiatric hospital in Mexico City because of Alzheimer's disease. He died on August 2, 1995.",
"Miguel Torruco Miguel Torruco (1920–1956) was a Mexican film actor. He was one of the stars of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema until his sudden death at the age of thirty six after falling off a horse. He was married to the actress María Elena Marqués.",
"Paquirri Francisco Rivera Pérez, known as Paquirri (March 5, 1948 – September 26, 1984), was a Spanish bullfighter. Paquirri was gored by a bull named \"Avispado\" (Spanish for street-smart, or wasp-like) during a bullfight in Pozoblanco (Córdoba), and died while he was being transported to Córdoba Hospital. His death led to legislative change that forced the bullrings to be equipped with intensive care units. He was first married to Carmen Ordóñez, with whom he had two sons, Francisco Rivera Ordóñez & Cayetano Rivera Ordóñez. Both these sons are matadors and form part of the Ordóñez family bullfighting dynasty. After divorcing Carmen Ordóñez, he married the famous Spanish singer Isabel Pantoja, with whom he had a son named Francisco José Rivera Pantoja, better known as Kiko Rivera. His brother José Rivera Pérez, better known as \"Riverita\" was also bullfighter.",
"Manoj Punj Manoj Punj was an Indian Punjabi film director. He directed the hits in Punjabi Cinema. After graduating with a degree in arts, and experiencing theater in Chandigarh, he assisted Prof. P. S. Nirola who made corporate and documentary films. He then shifted to Mumbai where he began his career as an assistant in various television and film projects. Few years later he started directing various kinds of TV programmes independently. This was followed by a series of hit Punjabi films. Manoj Punj died on 22 October 2006 due to a cardiac arrest in Mumbai,Maharashtra state of India at a young age of 36."
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[
"heart attack"
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What is the date of birth of the director of film Four Girls In Town?
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Four Girls in Town Four Girls in Town is a 1957 American CinemaScope Technicolor drama film, directed by Jack Sher, about four girls trying to be movie stars. When the leading lady drops out of a new film to be shot in New Orleans, studio head James Manning seeks an unknown actress to be his new star. He finds four leading candidates and employs aspiring director Mike Snowden to conduct their screen tests. The young women come from all walks of life. Kathy Conway is a Minnesota girl who agrees to try acting to please her mother. Ina Schiller is from Vienna, where she was recently widowed. Vicki Dauray comes from Paris, where she leaves behind a husband and child. Maria Antonelli is a beauty from Italy whose talent is mainly in alluring men. Kathy takes a personal interest in Mike, but is disappointed when he leaves a party with Ina instead. Handsome actor Tom Grant is interested in Vicki and publicist Ted Larabee promotes her, neither aware that she is a married woman. Ina is introduced to Mike's moody composer friend Johnny Pryor, while Maria is seduced by Spencer Farrington, Jr., a playboy hotelier. Kathy's mother turns up and expects everyone to recognize her daughter as a future star. Kathy fails her screen test, but realizes Mike wants to pursue a personal relationship with her. The original actress changes her mind and takes back the film role, but the studio offers Ina and Maria movie contracts, and marriage contracts with their new suitors. Vicki is not disappointed, realizing that her family comes first.
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"Beatrice Alda Beatrice Alda is an American actress and filmmaker who appeared in \"The Four Seasons\" and \"Men of Respect\". Alda played Lisa in the 1981 film, \"The Four Seasons\", directed by her father, and reprised the role in the 1984 television series of the same name. She played Judy, the daughter of Steve, played by her real life father, in the 1988 film \"A New Life\". Alda and her wife filmmaker Jennifer Brooke co-directed and produced the 2008 documentary film \"Out Late\", which follows the lives of people who came out as gay, lesbian, and transgender while they were senior citizens. They also co-directed and produced the 2016 documentary \"Legs: a Big Issue in a Small Town\" about a controversy surrounding a giant Larry Rivers sculpture in a small American town. Alda is the daughter of actor Alan Alda and author and photographer Arlene Weiss. Her sisters are Eve and actress Elizabeth Alda. Alda has four children with wife Jennifer Brooke.",
"Four in the Morning (film) Four in the Morning is a 1965 British film directed by Anthony Simmons and starring Judi Dench. It featured a score by John Barry. The plot revolves around the lives of two couples living in London and whether they are connected to the body of a young woman found dead on the banks of the River Thames. These two couples do not know each other.",
"Maureen Bradley Maureen Bradley is a Canadian film director, producer, screenwriter, media artist, professor, and curator. She has produced over fifty short films and her work has been recognized internationally. Through her work, she challenges traditional gender norms and opposes the heteronormativity that dominates the television and film industry. Her focus is to bring more nontraditional representations of sex, gender, and sexuality to the forefront of film. Her work predominantly features queer characters and themes, including her most recent work and first feature film, \"Two 4 One\". Bradley currently works as an Associate Professor at the University of Victoria in the Writing Department. Bradley was born and raised in Montreal, Quebec. She grew up with a love of music and sound, and in her early years, she pursued this love as a bassist in the underground music scene in Montréal, in the band \"Sons of the Desert\". It wasn't until later on that she discovered her interest in editing, film, and media art. Since then, she has played an active role in the Canadian independent film community. Her work has been featured in major venues, including the New Gallery and the Museum of Modern Art. Bradley attended Concordia University for Communications and Media Studies. Upon her relocation to Vancouver, she furthered her education at the University of British Columbia. There, she received a Master of Fine Arts degree in Film Production. During her career as a Montréal-based bassist, Bradley first became interested in the media industry when she was awarded a VideoFACT production grant to create a music video. From there, she became an assistant professor of film production at the University of Regina. During her time in Regina, she became the Saskatchewan District Council of the Directors Guild of Canada's first female director in 2002. She then returned to British Columbia and became an associate professor at the University of Victoria's Writing Department, where she continues to teach film and video. Using a grant she received from the Canada Foundation for Innovation, Bradley brought the Hi-Def Story Incubator Lab to life at the University of Victoria. Bradley has been active in the film community across Canada since 1988. Her work in the Canadian film scene has been focused on challenging typical gender norms and binaries. While directing and appearing in the series \"Road Movies\" in 1992, which reached an audience of fifteen million viewers, she became the first person to publicly come out on a network Canadian television series.",
"Kathleen Shannon Kathleen Shannon (November 11, 1935 – January 9, 1998) was a Canadian film director and producer. She is best known as the founder and first executive producer of Studio D of the National Film Board of Canada, the first government-funded film studio in the world dedicated to women filmmakers. Shannon began her career in the Canadian film industry cataloging music for Crawley Films in Ottawa after dropping out of high school at the age of 16. She later joined the National Film Board (NFB) as an editor in 1956 when she was 21. In her early years at the NFB Shannon worked as a sound, music, and picture editor. After Shannon had some 200 films to her credit as an editor she directed her first film, \"Goldwood\" in 1970. \"Goldwood\" was based on her childhood memories of one of the mining towns in Northern British Columbia where her father, a mining engineer, had worked. From 1974 to 1975, Shannon produced and directed eleven short films that made up the Working Mothers film series. The films delve into the experiences of working mother's throughout Canada, with some of the films focused on an individual women, including \"Our Dear Sisters\", whose subject was Indigenous filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin. The series was created as part of the NFB's Challenge for Change Program (1967-1980), which was a government funded initiative to bring the art and practice of film making to communities across Canada in an effort to incite social change. Initially meant to be one film, Shannon and distributive consultant Doris Mae Oulton proposed a format change of several short films and held small test screenings across different communities to try convince the NFB and the projects federal government sponsor of the new format's potential for success. With the new format approved, the Working Mother's series became arguably one of the most important achievements of Challenge for Change, and its success paved the way for Shannon's proposal for a women's studio within the NFB. Shannon was the driving force behind the creation of Studio D. She lobbied the unenthusiastic NFB to create a women's film production unit that would produce feminist documentaries created by and for women. When the studio was launched in 1974, it was housed in the basement of the NFB headquarters in Montreal with a budget of $100,000 and three women on staff; Shannon, Margaret Pettigrew, and Yuki Yoshida.",
"Nick Hurran Nick Hurran (born 1959) is a British film and television director. His 1998 film \"Girls' Night\" was entered into the 48th Berlin International Film Festival. Hurran is married to a television producer, Michele Buck, with whom he has two children.",
"Marcel Grant Marcel Grant (born 19 July 1961) is a British independent filmmaker based in London, who has written and directed four feature films, \"Open My Eyes\" (2016) \"Coffee Sex You\" (2014), \"Just Inès\" (2010), and \"What's Your Name 41?\" (2005). Grant is the founder of MAMA Film Worx and the WSFF film festival and brand. He is currently filming a one hour documentary \"The Late Great ‘78\" about his personal experience as a seventeen year old in 1978, featuring Grace Jones and Amanda Lear, due for release in early 2022. In the late 1970s Grant was an influential figure on the London and New York club scene, where he worked as an actor and singer. In the early 1980s Grant became a part of the New Romantic movement in London, and in 1984, at the age of 23, was named “London's youngest club entrepreneur” by \"Time Out\" magazine for establishing the new concept of ‘One Nighters’ at Legends in Mayfair. By 1986 Grant had moved into property and project development. In 1993 Grant started working with Thompson Holdings overseeing several of the group's main interests, such as Windsor Racecourse, Queens Park Rangers F.C. premier league football club and the Portuguese luxury resort Quinta Do Lago. Grant and Thompson then co-founded the film production company Pagoda (1998), which in 2000 saw its first commercial success with the film \"Gangster No. 1\" starring Paul Bettany and Malcolm McDowell. Grant left Thompson Holdings in 2004, to become an independent filmmaker and to establish the independent film production company Shipwreck Film, where he shot four short films, as well as his first feature \"What's Your Name 41?\" (2005) starring Con O'Neill and Ann Mitchell. The film was shown at several international film festivals, including Raindance Film Festival, the Berlin International Directors Lounge and the California Independent Film Festival. Grant subsequently wrote, directed and produced three further feature films: \"Just Inès\" (2010); \"Coffee Sex You\" (2014); and \"Open My Eyes\" (2016).",
"Four Wives Four Wives is a 1939 American drama film starring the Lane Sisters (Priscilla Lane, Rosemary Lane, Lola Lane) and Gale Page. The film was directed by Michael Curtiz and is based on the story \"Sister Act\" by Fannie Hurst. The supporting cast features Claude Rains, Jeffrey Lynn, Eddie Albert, Frank McHugh and Dick Foran. The picture is a sequel to \"Four Daughters\" (1938) and was followed by \"Four Mothers\" (1941). \"Four Wives\" was released by Warner Bros. on December 25, 1939. Ann Lemp Borden has been recently widowed, after her husband Mickey Borden, a down-and-out and unlucky musical genius, is tragically killed in a car accident. She now lives at home again with her father, Aunt Etta and younger sister Kay. Her two other sisters Emma and Thea are married. Kay is dating young doctor Clint Forrest Jr., and Emma and Thea wish to have children. Ann, engaged to musical composer Felix Dietz, suddenly discovers that she is pregnant with her deceased husband's child. Unable to forget Mickey, she is unsure about marrying Felix. A flashback shows Mickey playing an unfinished musical composition “that has only a middle…no beginning…no ending” and Ann frequently replays the tune in her head or on her piano. Ann is distressed over the raw deal that life has dealt to Mickey. Felix eventually convinces Ann to marry him and they elope, but Ann is still caught up in the past tragedy. Felix finishes Mickey's composition and conducts it nationally on radio, making a speech commemorating Mickey's genius and untimely death. Convinced now that Mickey Borden did not die in vain, Ann comes back to reality, rediscovers her love for Felix and, together with her family, goes on to have a normal, happy life complete with her child, nieces and nephews. Critic Frank Nugent of \"The New York Times\" wrote: \"Sequels so rarely even approximate the quality of their originals that the Warners deserve a special word of commendation this morning for their 'Four Wives,' the Strand's inevitable aftermath to the 'Four Daughters' which appeared on most of the ten-best lists last year.",
"Trish McAdam Trish McAdam (born June 17, 1955) is an Irish screen director. McAdam was born in Dublin. She got interested in working in film after living in New York City and working with both the filmmaker Vivienne Dick and the photographer Nan Goldin. Her early films in the 1980s included the short \"Berlin\". Since then she has gone on to direct the feature film \"Snakes and Ladders\" and more recently the film \"Confinement\". McAdam also made the documentary series \"Hoodwinked: Irish Women Since the 1920s\".",
"Eight Girls in a Boat (1934 film) Eight Girls in a Boat is a 1934 American Pre-Code drama film directed by Richard Wallace and written by Helmut Brandis, Lewis R. Foster and Casey Robinson. It is a remake of the 1932 German film \"Eight Girls in a Boat\", which was also co-written by Brandis. The film stars Dorothy Wilson, Douglass Montgomery, Kay Johnson, Walter Connolly, Ferike Boros, James Bush and Barbara Barondess. The film was released on January 5, 1934, by Paramount Pictures. While attending a girls' school in Switzerland, young Christa Storm discovers she is expecting a baby. Student David wants to marry her, but he is poor and Christa's father objects to him as a suitable spouse. Christa contemplates suicide by poison and even enjoys a final night out with friends before having a change of heart. Others from the rowing team, including the coach, are unaware of Christa's plight. To punish her, the coach at one point makes Christa do strenuous dives and strokes in the water until she nearly collapses. All turns out well for her in the end.",
"Claude Fournier (filmmaker) Claude Fournier (born July 23, 1931 in Waterloo, Quebec) is a Canadian film director, screenwriter, editor and cinematographer. He is one of the forerunners of the Cinema of Quebec. He is the twin brother of Guy Fournier. Claude Fournier began his career in journalism then moved to the Radio-Canada as a news cameraman. He joined the National Film Board of Canada in 1957 as a writer and director, and he worked on early cinéma-vérité films such as \"À Saint-Henri le cinq septembre\" and \"La lutte\". He left the Board to work in the United States with famed documentary filmmakers Richard Leacock and D.A. Pennebaker, then returned to Montreal in 1963 to set up his own production company, Rose Films. In 1970, he directed \"Deux femmes en or\", one of the most successful Quebec films of its time. In the private sector, Fournier produced over 100 short films, co-wrote the Sophia Loren film \"A Special Day\", a Canada-Italy co-production that was nominated for an Oscar, and directed \"The Tin Flute\" with Marilyn Lightstone and \"The Book of Eve\" with Claire Bloom. \"The Tin Flute\" was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival. His 1988 TV series \"The Mills of Power (Les Tisserands du pouvoir)\" won him a Gémeaux Award for best direction of a television drama and a Genie Award for Best Screenplay. Donald Sutherland described him as \"one of the truly wretched directors of the world.\" Also a published poet, novelist and essayist, Claude Fournier is one of the most durable and respected Quebec filmmakers of his generation."
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"16 March 1913"
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Which film was released earlier, Terri (Film) or A Matter Of Who?
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A Matter of WHO A Matter of WHO is a 1961 British comedy thriller film directed by Don Chaffey and starring Terry-Thomas as a World Health Organization employee trying to trail the source of a deadly virus. It also featured Julie Alexander, Sonja Ziemann, Alex Nicol, Richard Briers, Honor Blackman and Carol White. It was made at MGM-British Elstree Studios with sets designed by Elliot Scott. MGM records say it lost $142,000. Aboard an airliner flying from Nice to London, an oil driller returning from the Middle East named Cooper becomes very ill. This attracts the notice of World Health Organization self-styled "germ detective" Archibald Bannister. It turns out that Cooper's new wife, Michèle, and his business associate, Kennedy, know each other. Bannister is reprimanded by his boss, Hatfield, for previously shutting down London Airport because of what turns out to be an ordinary rat. This time, however, Cooper is diagnosed with highly infectious smallpox. There are also outbreaks in Brussels and Zurich. Bannister suspects that all three cases were contracted from a fourth person, a carrier.
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"Family Video Diaries: Daughter of the Bride Family Video Diaries: Daughter of the Bride is a 1997 American short documentary film directed by Terri Randall. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.",
"About Her About Her is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Phyllis Ellis and aired in 2011. Narrated by Kim Cattrall, the film profiles a number of women battling the HER2 strain of breast cancer. A shorter version of the film premiered at Toronto's Breast Fest Film Festival in 2009, before being expanded into a full-length film. The longer film was again screened at Breast Fest, along with a television broadcast on W Network. The film won the Donald Brittain Award for Best Social/Political Documentary Program at the 1st Canadian Screen Awards in 2012.",
"A Matter of Wife... and Death A Matter of Wife... and Death is a 1975 American made-for-television crime drama mystery film. It is a sequel to the 1973 film \"Shamus\" and was intended as a pilot for a series. The teleplay was written by Don Ingalls and the film directed by Marvin Chomsky, with former head of production at MGM Robert M. Weitman as the producer. The film was broadcast on NBC on May 3, 1975. Rod Taylor played the part of the private detective Shamus McCoy, a role originated by Burt Reynolds. The cast also included Anne Archer, Cesare Danova, John Colicos, Luke Askew, Larry Block, Anita Gillette, and Joe Santos reprising his \"Shamus\" role of Lieutenant Promuto. \"Wonder Woman\" actress Lynda Carter also played a small role as Shamus's girlfriend. The film ran for 73 minutes in color with mono sound, and was released by Columbia.",
"A Matter of Justice A Matter of Justice is a 1993 American television film directed by Michael Switzer and starring Patty Duke and Martin Sheen. Televised in two parts, it is based on a true story. A true story about the mother of a murder victim seeking to bring her son's widow to justice and gain custody of her granddaughter. Filming occurred in Kansas.",
"Family Matters (film) Family Matters (Danish:\"Det bli'r i familien\") is a 1993 Danish-Swedish-Portuguese drama film directed by Susanne Bier. The film stars Philip Zandén, Ghita Nørby, Ernst-Hugo Järegård, and Ana Padrao. On her deathbed Jan's mother tells him that he is adopted and that his biological mother is called Lilli. Jan seeks Lilli, who turns out to be an eccentric actress, and together they taxi to Portugal to find Jim's biological father. The mother and son get to know each other's good and bad sides, and on arrival in the south, Jan finds both the love of his life and his sister. \"Family Matters\" continued exploration of complex, tabooed family relations begun in \"Freud's Leaving Home\", including an incestuous relationship between brother and sister.",
"Matter of Trust Matter of Trust is a 1997 independent erotic thriller film directed by Joey Travolta and written by John Penney. Model and dancer Dita Von Teese played a small role. Other cast members include: C. Thomas Howell as Michael D'Angelo, Joan Severance as Theresa Marsh, Nick Mancuso as Peter Marsh, Robert Miano as Ben and Jennifer Leigh Warren as Janet. A prosecutor is building a case against a suspected serial killer. She receives death threats, but ignores them at first. Until he husband disappears and someone blackmails her. She then turns to her ex-husband, a suspended homicide detective.",
"To Whom It May Concern: Ka Shen's Journey To Whom It May Concern: Ka Shen's Journey () is a 2009 docudrama about actress Nancy Kwan. Directed and written by former Warner Bros. executive Brian Jamieson, the film depicts Kwan's meteoric rise to fame when she was selected to star in the 1960 film \"The World of Suzie Wong\" and the 1961 film \"Flower Drum Song\". In an era when White people played the Asian roles in Hollywood, Kwan's achievement was groundbreaking. The film portrays Kwan's being cast for inconspicuous roles after her early success. \"To Whom It May Concern\" was filmed in locations in several countries, including Cambodia, Hong Kong, and the United States. In Cambodia's 12th-century temple Angkor Wat, Kwan grapples with the death of her son, Bernie Pock, from AIDS at the age of 33 in 1996. The film is being screened in film festivals internationally. It was awarded \"Best Feature Documentary\" by American International Film Festival and WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival. Reviewers praised the documentary for its judicious use of archival footage and poignant interviews with Kwan. Several reviewers characterized the clips of Kwan's watching \"The World of Suzie Wong\" as unnecessary and unpolished. A fan of Nancy Kwan's, Brian Jamieson, an executive at the home entertainment division of Warner Bros., started to examine her life while his company was deciding whether to re-release several of Kwan's films. As a youth in New Zealand, Jamieson watched movies in which Caucasian actors portrayed Asian characters. Pondering why studios made this decision, he was fascinated in 1960 when he watched \"The World of Suzie Wong\" by how Kwan became the first Asian lead in a Hollywood film. In 2000, Jamieson began trying to convince his colleagues to re-release three of Nancy Kwan's films, \"The Main Attraction\", \"Honeymoon Hotel\" and \"Tamahine\". After three fruitless years, he came up with a second idea: creating a 30-minute documentary of Kwan's life titled \"The World of Nancy Kwan\" and bundling it with five films. In addition to \"The Main Attraction\", \"Honeymoon Hotel\", \"Tamahine\", all of which were owned by Warner Bros.",
"The Woman Between Friends The Woman Between Friends is a 1918 American silent drama film written and directed by Tom Terriss, based on the novel, \"Between Friends\" by Robert W. Chambers. The film stars Alice Joyce, Marc McDermott, and Robert Walker.",
"Inconvenient Indian Inconvenient Indian is a 2020 Canadian documentary film, directed by Michelle Latimer. It is an adaptation of Thomas King's non-fiction book \"The Inconvenient Indian\", focusing on narratives of indigenous peoples of Canada. King stars as the documentary's narrator, with Gail Maurice and other indigenous artists appearing. It premiered at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, where it won multiple accolades. The film uses a non-linear narrative style to reflect its indigenous roots and deliver its story visually. It explores topics of indigenous people's history and present. The film was widely praised, particularly for Latimer's direction and its authentic indigenous style and voice, and won various documentary awards at Canadian festivals. In December 2020, following the emergence of questions around Latimer's indigenous identity, the film was withdrawn from distribution. \"Inconvenient Indian\" blends scenes in which author and indigenous rights activist Thomas King, filmed in a taxi cab being driven by actress Gail Maurice in character as an indigenous trickster, narrates portions of his own book with video clips of historical representation of indigenous peoples as well as segments profiling modern figures, such as Kent Monkman, Christi Belcourt, A Tribe Called Red, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril and Nyla Innuksuk, who are reshaping the narrative with their contemporary work in art, music, literature and film. It does not follow a traditional documentary format, using evocative imagery instead of talking heads; King is never seen to speak, appearing on screen independent to his narration. The film also uses dramatic juxtaposition to deliver its message, including scenes with King's narration overlaying an image of him eating popcorn while watching old film Westerns and following a scene of Dakota Access Pipeline protests with one of a man distributing seal meat to indigenous Canadian families, having previously clubbed it to ensure it was shot dead. Director Michelle Latimer said she did this to highlight the cruelty towards human protestors, as well as suggesting that mainstream society is more angered at cruelty towards animals (rather than people) because hunting allows indigenous peoples to be self-reliant and live their history outside of society in the present.",
"Terri Terri is an alternative spelling of Terry. It is a common feminine given name and is also a diminutive for Teresa. People with the name Terri include:"
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"A Matter Of Who"
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What is the date of death of the director of film Bermuda: Cave Of The Sharks?
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Bermuda: Cave of the Sharks Bermuda: Cave of the Sharks (, , also known as "Cave of the Sharks" and "The Shark's Cave") is a 1978 Spanish-Italian-Mexican adventure-mystery film written and directed by Tonino Ricci and starring Andrés García and Janet Agren. Off the Coast of Santo Domingo is recovered Andrés, an experienced diver, who disappeared six months before with the crew of the vessel on which he was traveling. Lovingly assisted by his wife Angelica and his brother Richard, the young man restores his health but can not remember any detail that sheds light on the mystery of the six months of incredible survival.
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"Bermuda Grace Bermuda Grace is a 1994 American television film directed by Mark Sobel. A comedy thriller, it stars William Sadler and David Harewood as a Philadelphia and a British policemen who go on the hunt of a jewel thief to the Atlantic island of Bermuda. It was also considered a backdoor pilot for potential series, however the high production cost of an ongoing series in Bermuda made that impossible. It also featured Serena Scott Thomas, Andrew Jackson, Leslie Phillips and Cliff Parisi. Written and produced by William Davies and William Osborne, writers of the feature film Twins.",
"Blue Water White Death Blue Water, White Death is a 1971 American documentary about sharks which was directed by Peter Gimbel and James Lipscomb. It received favourable reviews and was described as a \"well produced odyssey\" and \"exciting and often beautiful\". It screened theatrically and was broadcast on television at various times during the 1970s and 1980s. The film was re-released on DVD in 2009. The following people appeared in the documentary – Tom Chapin, Phil Clarkson, Stuart Cody, Peter Lake, Peter Matthiessen, Rodney Fox, Valerie Taylor, Ron Taylor, Stan Waterman, Peter Gimbel, James Lipscomb and Rodney Jonklaas. In 1986 Tom Chapin reflected on his role as an assistant cameraman on the production, joking that his life had \"all been downhill since.\" Some underwater sequences appearing in the film were shot using shark-proof cages.",
"James Algar James Algar (June 11, 1912 – February 26, 1998) was an American film director, screenwriter, and producer. He worked at Walt Disney Productions for 43 years and received the Disney Legends award in 1998. He was born in Modesto, California and died in Carmel, California. Algar directed an Oscar-winning documentary \"White Wilderness,\" which contains a scene that supposedly depicts a mass lemming migration, and ends with the lemmings leaping into the Arctic Ocean. In 1982, the CBC Television news magazine program \"The Fifth Estate\" broadcast a documentary about animal cruelty in Hollywood called \"Cruel Camera\", focusing on \"White Wilderness\", as well as the television program \"Wild Kingdom\". Bob McKeown, the host of the CBC program, discovered that the lemming scene was filmed at the Bow River near downtown Calgary, and not in the Arctic Ocean as implied by the film. McKeown interviewed a lemming expert, who claimed that the particular species of lemming shown in the film is not known to migrate, much less commit mass suicide.",
"Giles Walker Giles Walker (January 17, 1946 - March 23, 2020) was a Scottish-born Canadian film director. Giles Walker, born in 1946 in Dundee, Scotland, received a B.A. from the University of New Brunswick and an M.A. from Stanford University Film School in 1972. He joined the Canadian National Film Board soon after, directing documentaries, then switching to dramas in 1977. \"Bravery in the Field\" was nominated for a live-action short Oscar in 1979. \"The Masculine Mystique\" (directed with John N. Smith), the first of a trio of NFB movies dealing with issues of gender relations, showed Walker's experimental side, working with non-professional actors and the technique of improvisation. The two other films in the series, however, moved closer to an easy, palatable Hollywood style – successfully in \"90 Days\" but less so in \"The Last Straw\". Perhaps Walker's most successful fictional work is \"Princes in Exile\", a film about a summer camp for children with cancer, notable for delicate treatment of the subject and a moving lack of sentimentality. Walker died in March 2020.",
"Great White Death Great White Death is a 1981 documentary/mondo film about great white sharks narrated by Glenn Ford. The film is notable for its \"Faces of Death\"-like footage of actual shark attacks. The film shows Henri Bource, a scuba diver who survived a shark attack in November 1964.",
"N. Paul Kenworthy Norman Paul Kenworthy Jr. (February 14, 1925 – October 15, 2010) was an American film director and cinematographer, mostly for Disney studio films. As co-inventor of the Snorkel Camera System, a remote-controlled periscope camera, he shared a 1978 non-competitive Academy Award for technical achievement with engineer William Latady.",
"Francis Megahy Francis Megahy (18 March 1935 – 1 May 2020) was a British film director.",
"Cecil Holmes (director) Cecil William Holmes (23 June 1921 – 24 August 1994) was a New Zealand-born film director and writer. He was born in Waipukurau, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. He served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force and British Royal Navy during World War II before turning to filmmaking. He made a number of documentaries for the New Zealand National Film Unit then moved to Australia, where he directed several feature films and a number of documentaries for the Commonwealth Film Unit. The Cecil Holmes Award given by the Australian Directors Guild is named after him. The Award was instigated in 1995, and is presented by the ADG board from time to time to honour recipients who have advocated for the role of the director. His second wife was author and Indigenous advocate Sandra Le Brun Holmes.",
"Sérgio Ricardo (director) João Lutfi (18 June 1932 – 23 July 2020), known professionally as Sérgio Ricardo, was a Brazilian film director and composer. He directed five films between 1964 and 1974. In 1967 he gained attention when taking part in the third Festival de Música Popular Brasileira, in which he performed a rearranged version of \"Beto bom de bola\". The audience disliked the fact that he would not perform the original version and booed him during the whole performance. At a certain moment, he gave up playing, shouted \"You won!\" at the audience, broke his acoustic guitar and threw it at the crowd. He was then immediately disqualified. He was infected with COVID-19, and became COVID-negative in May 2020. However, he died without being discharged on 23 July 2020, a month after his 88th birthday, of heart failure.",
"Bermuda Tentacles Bermuda Tentacles is an American made-for-television science fiction horror film directed by Nick Lyon. It starred Linda Hamilton and featured ensemble cast of Trevor Donovan, Mýa, John Savage and Jamie Kennedy. The movie premiered April 12, 2014 on the Syfy channel and garnered largely negative reviews. When Air Force One goes down over the Bermuda Triangle, the Navy sends its best rescue team. But in saving the President, the team awakens a monster which threatens America's entire Eastern Seaboard and, ultimately, the world. \"Bermuda Tentacles\" was released to DVD on September 9, 2014. Writing for online website \"HorrorNews.Net\", Shawn Handling gave the movie a highly negative review and concluded,\"I think it’s one of the worst that has been produced and should have been sunk with the rest of those missing ships.\""
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"9 March 2014"
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Are both Murphy Lakes (Georgia) and Ticllacocha located in the same country?
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Murphy Lakes (Georgia) Murphy Lakes is a reservoir in Catoosa County, Georgia, United States. Murphy Lakes lie at an elevation of 748 feet (228 m).
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"Ticlla (Cacamayo) Ticlla (possibly from Quechua for eyelash; two-colored, or for 'with alternating colors') is a mountain in the Chila mountain range in the Andes of Peru, about high. It is located in the Arequipa Region, Castilla Province, Chachas District. Tiklla lies at the Cacamayo (possibly from Quechua for \"rock river\"), east of Huayllayoc and southeast of Huamanripayoq.",
"Lake Murphy (Washington) Lake Murphy is a lake in King County, Washington. Klinkhammer Lakes lie at an elevation of 4,751 feet (1,448 m).",
"Ticlla (Caylloma-Tuti) Ticlla (possibly from Quechua for eyelash; two-colored or for 'with alternating colors') is a mountain in the Chila mountain range in the Andes of Peru. It is located in the Arequipa Region, Caylloma Province, on the border of the districts of Caylloma and Tuti. Ticlla lies southwest of Jatunchungara and Chungara.",
"Lake Conasauga (Floyd County, Georgia) Lake Conasauga is a reservoir in Floyd County, in the U.S. state of Georgia. The lake was named after deposits of Conasauga shale seen there.",
"Harold Lloyd Murphy Harold Lloyd Murphy (born March 31, 1927) is a Senior United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Born in Haralson County, Georgia, Murphy was in the United States Navy towards the end of World War II, from 1945 to 1946. He received a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1949, and was then in private practice in Buchanan, Georgia until 1958, and in Buchanan and Tallapoosa, Georgia until 1971. He was a Georgia state representative from 1951 to 1961. He was an assistant state solicitor general of the Tallapoosa Judicial Circuit in 1956. He was a Superior Court judge for the Tallapoosa Judicial Circuit, Georgia from 1971 to 1977. On July 7, 1977, Murphy was nominated by President Jimmy Carter to a seat on the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia vacated by James Clinkscales Hill. Murphy was confirmed by the United States Senate on July 28, 1977, and received his commission on July 29, 1977. He took senior status on March 31, 2017.",
"Murphy Lake (Tuscola County, Michigan) Murphy Lake is a lake in Tuscola County, Michigan, United States. Murphy Lake lies at an elevation of 748 feet (228 m).",
"Toccoa, Georgia Toccoa is a city in far Northeast Georgia near the border with South Carolina. It is the county seat of Stephens County, Georgia, United States, located about from Athens and about northeast of Atlanta. The population was 9,133 as of the 2020 census. Native Americans, including indigenous peoples of the Mississippian culture, and historic Yuchi (linked to the Muscogee Creek confederacy and later allies of the Cherokee), occupied Tugaloo and the area of Toccoa for at least 1,000 years prior to European settlement. The Mississippian culture was known for building earthen platform mounds; in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, the people developed some large, dense cities and complexes featuring multiple mounds and, in some cases, thousands of residents. In what is known as the regional South Appalachian Mississippian culture, by contrast, settlements were smaller and the peoples typically built a single platform mound in the larger villages. Salvage archeological studies were conducted by Dr. Joseph Caldwell of the University of Georgia in 1957, prior to flooding of this area after construction of a dam downriver. He determined the first settlement was founded about 800 CE and lasted to 1700, when the village was burned. By that time, it was occupied by proto-Creek who were descendants of the Mississippians. Colonial maps until the American Revolution identified this village as one of the Hogeloge people (now known as Yuchi). While they later became allies of the Cherokee, they were of a different ethnicity and language group. Indian agent Col. George Chicken was one of the first English colonists to mention Toccoa in his journal from 1725, calling it Toxsoah. European Americans did not settle here until after the American Revolutionary War, when the government gave land grants in lieu of pay owed to veterans. A group led by Col. William H. Wofford moved to the area when the war ended. It became known as Wofford's Tract, or Wofford's Settlement. Col. Wofford is buried near Toccoa Falls. His son, William T. Wofford, was born near Toccoa (then part of Habersham County). Travelers had to rely on using fords, and later ferries, to get across the Tugaloo River.",
"Lake Murphy (Florida) Lake Murphy is a freshwater lake in Lake County, Florida, United States. Lake Murphy lies at an elevation of 62 feet (19 m).",
"J.C. Murphy Lake J. C. Murphey Lake is a reservoir in Newton County, Indiana, United States. It is part of the Willow Slough Fish and Wildlife Area.",
"Bull Sluice Lake Bull Sluice Lake is a small reservoir located along the Chattahoochee River in northern Georgia, in the northern suburbs of metro Atlanta. It is , and is impounded by the Morgan Falls Dam. Besides the hydroelectric power produced by the dam, the lake's primary use is recreation, including fishing and rowing. The term \"Bull Sluice\", so named by Cherokee Indians, originally was a shoal on the Chattahoochee River."
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[
"no"
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What is the award that the director of film Sathruvu earned?
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M. S. Sathyu Mysore Shrinivas Sathyu () (born 6 July 1930) is a leading film director, stage designer and art director from India. He is best known for his directorial "Garm Hava" (1973), which was based on the partition of India. He was awarded Padma Shri in 1975. Sathyu pursued his schooling and higher education at Mysore and Bangalore. In 1952, he quit college while working on his Bachelor of Science degree and instead plunged into the uncertain world of films in Bombay. He freelanced as an animator in 1952–53. After being unemployed for nearly four years, he got his first salaried job as assistant director to filmmaker Chetan Anand. He worked in theatre as a designer and director, including designing sets and lights for productions of Hindustani Theatre, Okhla Theatre of Habib Tanvir, Kannada Bharati and other groups of Delhi. In films, he has worked as an art director, camera-man, screenwriter, producer and director. His first film. His fas an independent Art director or Haqeeqat, a film by Chetan Anand, which won him recognition and the 1965 Filmfare Award for Best Art Direction. His filmography includes over 15 documentaries and 8 feature films in Hindi, Urdu and Kannada. His best known work, Garm Hava ("Scorching Winds", 1973), is one of the last cinema productions featuring 1950s Marxist cultural activists including Balraj Sahni and Kaifi Azmi. Garm Hava won several Indian national awards in 1974, including a National Integration Award. It was screened in the competitive section at Cannes and was also the Indian entry at the Oscars. It won the Filmfare award for best screenplay. M. S. Sathyu currently is associated mainly with television and stage. In 2013, Sathyu featured in the popular Google "Reunion" ad, where he played the role of Yusuf, an elderly Pakistani man who is reunited with his childhood pre-partition friend from India, Baldev (Vishwa Mohan Badola). The commercial went viral on social media. Sathyu is one of the patrons of Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA). He directed musical play Gul E Bakavali written by Sudheer Attavar; represented 8th World Theatre Olympics in year 2018 .
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"Dhavala Satyam Davala Satyam is an Indian film director, producer and screenplay writer. He has worked predominantly in Telugu cinema since the early 1980s. Satyam is known for his revolutionary movies known as Erra Cinema in Telugu. His film Yuvatharam Kadilindi won a Nandi Award for Best Feature Film from the Government of Andhra Pradesh and M. Prabhakar Reddy won the Nandi Award for Best Actor in 1980. He associated with film personalities such Dasari Narayana Rao, Madala Ranga Rao, Chiranjeevi, Murali Mohan and R. Narayana Murthy. Satyam directed \"Chaitanya Ratham\" (1987), a controversial biopic on politician Vangaveeti Mohana Ranga and his brother Vangaveeti Radha despite the political pressures. Both Ranga and Radha were murdered by political opponents. The movie prints were destroyed.",
"Cheran (director) Cheran (born 12 December 1970) is an Indian film director, producer, actor and lyricist known for his works in Tamil cinema. He is a four time National Film Award winner for \"Vetri Kodi Kattu\" (2000), \"Autograph\" (2004) and \"Thavamai Thavamirundhu\" (2005). He has also won five Tamil Nadu State Film Awards and six South Filmfare Awards. Cheran initially made breakthrough as a director by making village-based drama films focusing on human relationships, and achieved critical acclaim for his work in \"Bharathi Kannamma\" (1997) and \"Porkkaalam\" (1997). He later moved on to work on themes exploring how globalisation affects the Indian middle class, and told the story of scam job offers in \"Vetri Kodi Kattu\" (2000) and village-to-city emigration in \"Pandavar Bhoomi\" (2001). His most renowned film till date, \"Autograph\" (2004), is a semi-autobiographical tale of a man at four stage of his life. He later also experienced success with the family drama film \"Thavamai Thavamirundhu\" (2005) and as an actor in films such as \"Pirivom Santhippom\" (2008) and \"Yuddham Sei\" (2011). Cheran was born in Pazhaiyurpatty village near Madurai. His father Pandian was a film projector operator in Vellalur's touring theatre. His mother Kamala was a primary school teacher, and he has two sisters. He came to Chennai to pursue a career in films, and was keen to become an actor. Initially, he started career as a production manager in some films. In the film \"Puriyaadha Pudhir\" (1990), he worked as an assistant director K. S. Ravikumar, and was later promoted to an associate director from \"Cheran Pandiyan\" (1992) to \"Nattamai\" (1994). Cheran made his directorial debut through \"Bharathi Kannamma\" (1997), a village drama narrating the relationship between the daughter of a rich family and their retainer, starring Parthiban and Meena. During its release, the film ran into trouble with Thevar community who almost imposed a ban of the film due to its content.",
"Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Art Director The Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Art Director is given by the state government as part of its annual Tamil Nadu State Film Awards for Tamil (Kollywood) films.",
"NTR National Award The NTR National Award is an annual award presented by the Government of Andhra Pradesh to recognize people for their lifetime achievements and contributions to the Cinema of India. The NTR National Award is an honorary Nandi Award in the honour of an Indian Film actor, director, producer, and politician N.T. Rama Rao who also served as the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. The Award carries a cash prize of 500,000/- and a memento. The recipients of the awards are as follows:",
"Praveen Sattaru Praveen Sattaru is an Indo-American film director, screenwriter and producer, known for his works in Telugu cinema. He made his directorial debut with the 2011 film, \"\". In 2014, he directed the critically acclaimed anthology film, \"Chandamama Kathalu\" which won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu for that year. Praveen Sattaru was born in Vizianagaram, Andhra Pradesh, India. He holds MS degree in Chip Designing, and has worked as SAP consultant in IBM for about 10 years. He is an Indian immigrant to the United States. He is married to Archana. It was announced that Praveen Sattaru along with Deva Katta will be directing for Netflix.",
"Bharathiraja Bharathiraja (born 23 August 1942) is an Indian film director who works mainly in the Tamil film industry. Making his debut in 1977 with \"16 Vayathinile\", he is known for realistic and sensitive portrayals of rural life in his films. As of 2017, he has won six National Film Awards, four Filmfare Awards South, two Tamil Nadu State Film Awards and a Nandi Award. He has also directed films in Telugu and Hindi. The Government of India honoured him with the Padma Shri award, India's fourth-highest civilian honour, in 2004 for his contribution to the film industry. In 2005, he was conferred with the Doctor of Letters (honorary degree) from Sathyabama University. Bharathiraja started his film career as an assistant to Kannada filmmaker Puttanna Kanagal. Later, he assisted P. Pullaiah, M. Krishnan Nair, Avinasi Mani and A. Jagannathan. His first film \"16 Vayathinile\", for which he wrote the script, broke the then existing convention to create a new genre of village cinema. The film is now regarded as a milestone in the history of Tamil Cinema. About the film, Bharathiraja said: \"This movie was meant to be a black & white art film produced with the help of National Film Development Corporation\", but turned out to be a commercially successful colour film and a starting point for several important careers. His next film \"Kizhake Pogum Rail\" produced similar results and eventually brought in criticisms that Bharathiraja was capable of catering only to village audiences. This led him to make \"Sigappu Rojakkal\", about a psychopathic woman-hater that was totally westernized in terms of both conception and production. Bharathiraja confirmed his versatility and refusal to be tied down to one particular genre with an experimental film \"Nizhalgal\" (1980), and the action thriller \"Tik Tik Tik\" (1981). But undoubtedly, rural themes proved to be his strong suit as his biggest hits in the 1980s: \"Alaigal Oivathillai\" (1981), \"Mann Vasanai\" (1983) and \"Muthal Mariyathai\" (1985) were strong love stories in a village backdrop.",
"Dr. Vishnuvardhan Award The Dr. Vishnuvardhan Award, instituted in 2011 for the 2008–09 Karnataka State Film Awards is an award given by the government of Karnataka to long-serving film personalities in Kannada cinema. The award previously called Lifetime Contribution to Kannada Cinema Award, was named Dr. Vishnuvardhan Award in honour of Vishnuvardhan, one of Kannada cinema's actors, after his demise in 2009. The award carries a purse of 200,000 and a gold-plated plaque.",
"Chitrapu Narayana Rao Chitrapu Narayana Rao (born Chithrapu Narayana Murthy; 1913) was an Indian film director and producer known for his works in Telugu and Tamil cinema. He received a Certificate of Merit for the Third Best Tamil Film for \"Edhir Paradhathu\" (1958) and \"Annaiyin Aanai\" (1962). He also won the Nandi Award for the 1967 Telugu film \"Bhakta Prahlada\". He was born at Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh in 1913. Film director, Chitrapu Narasimha Rao, was his brother. He lost his son in 1962. He died in the year 1985. He started his film career assisting his younger brother Chitrapu Narasimha Rao in films like \"Seetha Kalyanam\", \"Sati Tulasi\", \"Mohini Rukhmangadha\" and \"Krishna Jarasandha\". His directorial debut was \"Bhakta Markandeya\" starring Vemuri Gaggayya and Sriranjani. The film had done well establishing him as a director. He subsequently directed many movies like \"Myravana\", \"Bhakta Prahlada\", \"Daksha Yagnam\", \"Bheeshma\" in both Telugu and Tamil languages. He has produced the film \"Krishna Kuchela\" in 1961. It was a failure and he went into financial problems. During the same period, He wanted to direct a movie for AVM Productions to regain his financial status. They started working on \"Bhakta Prahlada\" in 1965, for the first time in Eastman color. It was technically far superior to the Black and White version he made 25 years earlier. D. V. Narasa Raju was the co-writer for the project. The film was a box office success.",
"Satya Mithya Satya Mithya is a 1989 Bangladeshi film directed by A. J. Mintu. It won five Bangladesh National Film Awards in the Best Producer, Best Screenplay, Best Dialogue, Best Editing and Best Child Artist categories.",
"Raghupathi Venkaiah Award The Raghupathi Venkaiah Naidu Award is an award issued by the Indian state government of Andhra Pradesh, to recognise lifetime achievements in Telugu cinema. The award was introduced in 1981 in honour of Raghupathi Venkaiah Naidu, a pioneer of the Indian film industry. The winner is presented a Golden Nandi (named after a bull in Hindu mythology), a gold medal, a citation and a cash prize of at the Nandi Awards functions."
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[
"Filmfare Awards South"
] |
Are Edward M. Favor and Margaret Woodbridge both from the same country?
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Margaret Woodbridge Margaret Darling Woodbridge (January 6, 1902 – February 23, 1995), also known by her married name Margaret Presley, was an American competition swimmer, Olympic champion, and world record-holder. She represented the United States at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium. She won the gold medal as member of the winning U.S. team in the women's 4×100-meter freestyle relay. Woodbridge and her American relay teammates Frances Schroth, Irene Guest and Ethelda Bleibtrey set a new world record of 5:11.6 in the event final. Individually, Woodbridge received a silver medal for her second-place performance in the women's 300-meter freestyle, finishing behind American teammate Ethelda Bleibtrey, in a time of 4:42.8. Woodbridge was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame as an "Honor Pioneer Swimmer" in 1989.
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[
"Samuel Woodbridge Samuel Woodbridge may refer to:",
"Edward Woodbridge Edward Collins Woodbridge (born 18 September 1794 in Bloomsbury, Middlesex; died 11 February 1863 in Paddington, London) was an English amateur cricketer who made 10 known appearances in first-class cricket matches from 1815 until 1819. He was the elder brother of Frederick Woodbridge. Edward Woodbridge was mainly associated with Surrey.",
"George Walbridge Perkins Jr. George Walbridge Perkins II (May 2, 1895 – January 11, 1960) was an American diplomat who served as Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs from 1949 to 1953 and as United States Permanent Representative to NATO from 1955 to 1957. He was born on May 2, 1895, to George Walbridge Perkins. He graduated from Princeton in 1917, where he worked to abolish eating clubs. In 1921 he married Linn Merck, daughter of George W. Merck. In 1925 his son George Walbridge Perkins III (1925–2008) was born. He worked at Merck & Co., Inc. from 1927 to 1948. In 1950, he successfully persuaded Congress to assist Josip Broz Tito in his defiance of the Stalin regime. Perkins died of a heart attack in Manhattan on January 11, 1960.",
"Edward Porter Edward Porter may refer to:",
"The Favor (1994 film) The Favor is a 1994 romantic comedy film directed by Donald Petrie and written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon. It stars Harley Jane Kozak, Elizabeth McGovern, Bill Pullman, Brad Pitt and Ken Wahl. The original music score was composed by Thomas Newman. Kathy has seemingly been happily married to Peter, but their relationship has grown routine. She cannot help but wonder what would happen if she ever got together with her high school sweetheart, Tom, whom she had never slept with. Being married prevents her from acting on that, so she asks her friend, Emily, to look Tom up when she goes to Denver, and to sleep with him, then tell Kathy what it was like. Emily does this, but when she tells Kathy that Tom is awesome and they had sex all night, their friendship suffers, as does Kathy's marriage. Things become even more complicated when Emily learns she is pregnant, and is uncertain if Tom or her boyfriend Elliot is the father. \"The Favor\" was filmed in 1990, but went into wide release in the United States and Canada on April 29, 1994, owing to Orion's bankruptcy in 1991. It was released to home video on the DVD format for Region 1 on December 29, 2001, through MGM Home Entertainment. The film received mixed to negative reviews from critics. On the film-critics aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, it received 27% favorable reviews with an average rating of 4.9/10. On Metacritic the film scores a 51 out of 100 based on 11 reviews, indicating “mixed or average reviews.”",
"Edward Askew Edward Askew may refer to:",
"Edward G. Lanpher Edward Gibson Lanpher (born December 8, 1942 Richmond, Virginia) was an American Career Foreign Service Officer who served as the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Zimbabwe (1991-1995). Lanpher grew up in Alexandria, Virginia and attended the Burgundy Farm Country Day School which was the first racially integrated school in Virginia, Phillips Academy and Brown University.",
"Edward Close Edward Close may refer to:",
"Edward Hagan Edward Hagan may refer to:",
"Edward Ellice Edward Ellice may refer to:"
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[
"yes"
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Which film has the director who is older, We Found Love (Music Video) or The Secret Of The Blue Room?
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The Mystery of the Blue Room The Mystery of the Blue Room (Czech: Záhada modrého pokoje) is a 1933 Czechoslovak mystery film, directed by Miroslav Cikán. It is a remake of the German film "Secret of the Blue Room" (1932). It stars Karel Hašler, František Kovářík, and Jaroslav Marvan. At a country house, to impress his girlfriend a young man volunteers to spend the night in the famous Blue Room where a notorious murder took place many years before. In the morning he has completely vanished.
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[
"The Room (2019 film) The Room is a 2019 thriller film directed by Christian Volckman and starring Olga Kurylenko, Kevin Janssens, Joshua Wilson, John Flanders and Francis Chapman. The film follows a young couple who discover a way to fulfill all of their material desires, but then go too far by using it to create a child. It premiered on 15 April 2019 at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival. Matt and Kate, a young couple, move to Upstate New York, having purchased a home. While renovating, they discover a large hidden room and that a murder occurred on the property decades before. That evening, Matt learns that the killer is a \"John Doe\" and that he is still alive and in a psychiatric hospital. He also inadvertently discovers that the Room can grant any wish. He tells Kate and both quit their jobs with the Room providing everything they desire. Kate falls into depression when she realizes that nothing they wish for has any real value. To cheer her up, Matt tells her he wants to try for a child, but she becomes angry, reminding him of two previous miscarriages. She exclaims that she can't put herself through that pain again and storms out of the room, but ends up using the Room to create a baby, Shane. Matt wants her to use the Room to uncreate the baby, but neither she nor Matt are actually able to bring themselves to do so. Later, Matt goes to visit \"John Doe.\" At the hospital, Matt speaks with the \"John Doe,\" who warns that he and his wife should leave the house and forget the Room. Matt finds out that Room-created items age to dust when crossing over the threshold of the house. Kate tells Matt she is taking the baby out for some fresh air; he tries to dissuade her but ultimately does not stop her. Once the baby is outdoors, he ages to a young child in seconds; Kate screams for Matt, who runs outside and brings Shane back inside the home. The couple's marriage deteriorates as Kate attempts to parent Shane, while Matt ignores him. Shane grows impatient and bored since Kate will not allow him to leave the house, telling him that he is sick and that there are germs outside. Soon Shane discovers the Room and makes an outside area inside it, causing an argument between the parents.",
"Room (2005 film) Room is a 2005 independent drama film written and directed by Kyle Henry and starring Cyndi Williams. The screenplay concerns a woman who abandons her family to follow a vision. An overworked, middle-aged Texas woman embezzles from her employer and abandons her family to seek out a mysterious room that has been appearing to her in visions during seizure-like attacks. The film holds an approval rating of 69% on Rotten Tomatoes.",
"The Cutting Room (film) The Cutting Room is a 2015 British found footage horror film written and directed by Warren Dudley. The film was released in June 2015 and the bulk of principal photography was shot in Newhaven Fort's underground labyrinth of dark and winding brick tunnels. College students Raz, Charlie and Jess are about to start work on their end of year Media Studies project unaware of a malevolent force lurking deep below their sleepy town. A recent wave of apparent Cyberbullying and the disappearance of two local girls lead the group to an abandoned army barracks situated deep in the forests that surround the college. What they find there is a terrifying labyrinth of tunnels from which there seems no escape and a dark figure hell bent on tormenting them. Hunted, frightened and lost, Raz, Charlie and Jess must now escape the barracks or suffer the unspeakable fate that awaits them. The original score is by Richey Rynkowski. Additional music came from artists including Maid of Ace, Mojo Jojo, and Fins a Luminous. Paul Mount of \"Starburst\" rated it 7/10 stars and called it a \"a brisk, no-nonsense effort\" that puts an English spin on found footage. Mount concludes that the film is \"a cut above the rest\", partially thanks to its twist ending. Matt Boiselle of Dread Central rated it 2/5 stars and wrote that it is simplistic and boring, though he said it has several creepy scenes in the middle. Nicholas Olsen of HorrorNews.Net called it \"an effective horror film\" that makes the most of its locations.",
"White Room (film) White Room is a 1990 Canadian drama film written and directed by Patricia Rozema and starring Maurice Godin, Kate Nelligan and Sheila McCarthy. Ziggy Lorenc and Erika Ritter also have cameo appearances in the film as interviewers. Norm is a confused young man who is drawn into events after witnessing the murder of rock star Madeleine X (Margot Kidder). Jane, a mysterious woman, meets Norm at Madeleine X's funeral, and Zelda, a quirky bohemian artist, helps Norm get a job and attempt to solve the murder. The movie was released in Canada on VHS by Alliance Releasing Home Video. In 2002, the film was released on DVD by Alliance Atlantis. The DVD contains a widescreen presentation, French and English audio tracks, and an audio commentary by the director. As of 2019 the film has been released online on Canada Media Fund's Encore+ YouTube channel.",
"Leo's Room Leo's Room (in Spanish: El Cuarto De Leo) is a 2009 Uruguayan film about a young man coming to terms with his self and sexual identity. Enrique Buchichio directed the film, and Martín Rodríguez starred as Leo. In the film, Leo meets an acquaintance from school, Caro. He then develops a relationship with a much more confident young man named Seba. Throughout, his small room serves as a refuge, a place of limited privacy, and a metaphor for his reclusive lifestyle. Venkatesh called the film a \"fascinating though slow portal into the protagonist's grappling with sexuality.\"",
"The Room The Room is a 2003 American independent drama film written, produced, executive produced and co-directed by Tommy Wiseau along with Sandy Schklar in his feature-length directorial debut, who stars in the film alongside Juliette Danielle and Greg Sestero. The film centers on a melodramatic love triangle between amiable banker Johnny (Wiseau), his deceptive fiancée Lisa (Danielle) and his conflicted best friend Mark (Sestero). A significant portion of the film is dedicated to a series of unrelated subplots, most of which involve at least one supporting character and are left unresolved due to the film's inconsistent narrative structure. The work was reportedly intended to be semi-autobiographical in nature; according to Wiseau, the title alludes to the potential of a room to be the site of both good and bad events. The stage play from which the film is derived was so-called due to its events taking place entirely in a single room. A number of publications have labeled \"The Room\" as one of the worst films ever made. An assistant professor of film studies was the first to describe \"The Room\" as \"the \"Citizen Kane\" of bad movies.\" Originally shown only in a limited number of California theaters, \"The Room\" quickly became a cult film due to its bizarre and unconventional storytelling, technical and narrative flaws, and Wiseau's off-kilter performance. Although Wiseau has retrospectively described the film as a black comedy, audiences have generally viewed it as a poorly made drama, an opinion shared by some of the cast. \"The Disaster Artist\", Sestero's memoir of the making of \"The Room\", was co-written with Tom Bissell and published in 2013. A film of the same title based on the book, directed by and starring James Franco, was released on December 1, 2017; the book and film received widespread acclaim and numerous award nominations. Although the film was a box-office bomb, as of March 2022, box office sales for the movie has significantly increased in recent years. Johnny is a successful banker who lives in a San Francisco townhouse with his fiancée Lisa, who has become dissatisfied with their relationship. She seduces his best friend, Mark, and the two begin a secret affair. Meanwhile, Johnny, having overheard Lisa confessing her infidelity to her mother, Claudette, attaches a tape recorder to their phone in an attempt to identify her lover by recording their phone conversations.",
"Inside the Room Inside the Room is a 1935 British mystery film directed by Leslie S. Hiscott and starring Austin Trevor, Dorothy Boyd and George Hayes. It was shot at Twickenham Studios in west London. A French detective, Pierre Santos, investigates a popular singer suspected of murder. The film's sets were designed by the studio's resident art director James A. Carter.",
"The Secret of the Blue Room The Secret of the Blue Room is a 1933 American pre-Code mystery film, thriller, horror, directed by Kurt Neumann and starring Lionel Atwill, Gloria Stuart, Paul Lukas and Edward Arnold. The film is about a group of wealthy people who stay at a European mansion. The mansion features a \"blue room\" which is said to be cursed as everyone who stays there dies shortly after. Three people suggest a wager that each can survive a night in the blue room, after the first of them spends a night there, a scream is heard that night which wakes the others to realize that the man has vanished. Within the next few months, more murders occur in the blue room, which leads to Robert von Helldorf (Lionel Atwill) to summon the authorities. \"The Secret of the Blue Room\" is based on the German film \"Secret of the Blue Room\", and was Universal Studios least expensive feature made that year. Universal remade the film two mores times as \"The Missing Guest\" and as \"Murder in the Blue Room\". A woman's suitor challenges his two rivals to each spend a night in a room in which several murders occurred years before at 1 a.m. The suitor, Tommy, sleeps there on the first night but disappears at 1 a.m. Then the second man sleeps there on the second night. At 12:30 a.m, he starts playing the piano, but is shot half an hour later. As these events occur, a police investigation leads to several answers to several mysteries. On the fifth night, the third man sleeps in the Blue Room. However, he places a dummy in an armchair and conceals himself behind a coat. At 1 a.m, a revolver pokes round the door and fires at the dummy. The man and several police officers jump out of their hiding places. After a furious gunfight, the villain is apprehended and it turns out to be none other than Tommy, the first suitor, who had ostensibly disappeared. In their book on Universal Horror films, Tom Weaver and Michael Brunas and John Brunas described \" The Secret of the Blue Room\" as an \"engaging example of the early \"spooky house\" mystery\" and that it \"had all the recognizable elements of the classic Universal horror films\" but \"for all the atmosphere the picture unmistakably remains a whodunit at heart.",
"Hide and Seek (2014 film) Hide and Seek (released as Amorous in the United States) is a 2014 British-American romantic drama film, directed by Joanna Coates and co-written by Coates and Daniel Metz. The film won the Michael Powell Award at the Edinburgh International Film Festival. In an English cottage, four young people from London move in together, seeking to challenge social conventions and their own tolerances by engaging in scheduled partner-swapping. The durability of their new living arrangements is tested by the arrival of an outsider who fails to get in tune with the foursome's radical spirit.",
"In the Room (film) In the Room is a 2015 erotic drama film directed by Eric Khoo and written by Khoo and Jonathan Lim. The film stars Josie Ho, George Young, Daniel Jenkins, Koh Boon Pin, W Leon U, Show Nishino, Lawrence Wong, Nadia AR, and Ian Tan. The film comprises six different stories of couples in a single-room brothel at a hotel in Singapore, spread over several decades. The film is marked as Singapore's first erotic film. At the same time, Khoo downplays the film's erotic themes, calling its ode to the national cultural trends \"a look at Singapore through the decades. It's a homage to the country\". Khoo dedicated the film to the late horror writer Damien Sin, who wrote Khoo's career-launching \"Mee Pok Man\" (1995). Principal photography began on 3 September 2014 at the Infinite Studios in Singapore. The $800,000-budgeted film was produced by Nansun Shi and Zhao Wei Films, and distributed and financed by Distribution Workshop. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2015 and travelled to the San Sebastián International Film Festival, Busan International Film Festival and Singapore International Film Festival before the director withdrew his submission for a rating for the film from the Media Development Authority (MDA) as the MDA had deemed that two scenes exceeded the film classification guidelines. Khoo did not want any cuts for a commercial release of the film in Singapore and so the film was denied a commercial release as unrated films are not allowed for public release in Singapore. However, on 25 February 2016, the film was given a theatrical release in Singapore after an \"international version\" with subtle differences from the original was passed uncut with an R21 rating by the MDA. The story starts just after the surrender of the British to Japanese troops in Singapore in 1942. Six stories of six different Japanese, Thai, British, Chinese, and Korean couples are set in the same hotel room, spread over several decades. Nansun Shi is producing the $800,000 budgeted film along with Zhao Wei Films, and Eric Khoo is directing the film based on his own co-written script with Jonathan Lim. Distribution Workshop financed the film. Hong Kong actress Josie Ho stars in the film as a mama-san (a brothel owner)."
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"The Secret Of The Blue Room"
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Are both villages, Al-Houz and Abeleh, Khuzestan, located in the same country?
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Abeleh Abeleh () may refer to:
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[
"Howz-e Galurshur Howz-e Galurshur (, also Romanized as Ḩowẕ-e Galūrshūr; also known as Ḩowẕ-e Galūshūr and Hauz-i Galūshūr) is a village in Dokuheh Rural District, Seh Qaleh District, Sarayan County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 26, in 4 families.",
"Khuzu Khuzu (, also Romanized as Khūz̤ū) is a village in Behdasht Rural District, Kushk-e Nar District, Parsian County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 96, in 20 families.",
"Salmaneh, Khuzestan Salmaneh (, also Romanized as Salmāneh; also known as Salmāna) is a village in Gheyzaniyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Ahvaz County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 42, in 5 families.",
"Halveh, Khuzestan Halveh (, also Romanized as Ḩalveh, Ḩalvāh, and Ḩelveh; also known as Halveh-ye Bozorg and Ḩelvā) is a village in Gheyzaniyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Ahvaz County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 44, in 6 families.",
"Baghcheh Ghaz, Hamadan Baghcheh Ghaz (, also Romanized as Bāghcheh Ghāz) is a village in Pish Khowr Rural District, Pish Khowr District, Famenin County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 45, in 6 families.",
"Maliheh-ye Sadun Maliheh-ye Sadun (, also Romanized as Malīḩeh-ye Sa‘dūn; also known as Malīḩeh-ye Do) is a village in Jahad Rural District, Hamidiyeh District, Ahvaz County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 321, in 53 families.",
"Gollujeh-ye Abellu Gollujeh-ye Abellu (, also Romanized as Gollūjeh-ye Abellū; also known as Goljeh, Gollūjeh, Golujeh, and Gyulyudzha) is a village in Azghan Rural District, in the Central District of Ahar County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 77, in 23 families.",
"Galeh Har Galeh Har (; also known as Galleh Hod) is a village in Darreh Kayad Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 4 families.",
"Beyuz, Esmailiyeh Beyuz (, also Romanized as Beyūẕ; also known as Beyūẕ-e Do) is a village in Esmailiyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Ahvaz County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 81, in 14 families.",
"Abu Arazeh Abu Arazeh (, also Romanized as Abū ʿArāz̤eh) is a village in Nasar Rural District, Arvandkenar District, Abadan County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 14 families."
] |
[] |
[
"no"
] |
Are James Parton and Laura Fygi both from the same country?
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Laura Fygi Laura Fygi (born 27 August 1955) is a Dutch jazz singer. Fygi's father was a Dutch businessman, a director of Philips, and her mother an Egyptian belly dancer. She was raised in Uruguay, until her father's death in the late 1960s, when she moved back to the Netherlands with her mother. She was then under the care of a French-speaking governess before being adopted by the principal of her school. During the 1980s, she was a member of Centerfold, a Dutch disco band which was popular in the Netherlands, Europe, and Japan. In the early 1990s, she began a solo career and recorded her debut album with Toots Thielemans. During her career, she has worked with Johnny Griffin, Michel Legrand, Clark Terry and the Pasadena Roof Orchestra and considers Julie London one of her influences. She has sung in English, Chinese, French, Portuguese, and Spanish.
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[
"Jim James James Edward Olliges Jr. (born April 27, 1978), professionally known as Jim James or Yim Yames, is an American vocalist, guitarist, producer, and primary songwriter of the rock band My Morning Jacket. He has also released several solo albums. James grew up in the Highlands–Douglass neighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky. He attended St. Martha grade school and graduated from St. Xavier High School in 1996. James briefly attended the University of Kentucky. Prior to forming My Morning Jacket, James was the vocalist and guitarist of Month of Sundays, currently known as Mont de Sundua. As the vocalist, frontman, producer, and lead songwriter for My Morning Jacket, James has been instrumental in defining the sound of the band. He was given an \"Esky\" for best songwriter in \"Esquire\"'s 2006 Esky Music Awards in the April issue. James typically plays rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, and occasional lead guitar on My Morning Jacket songs. He played the role of the band leader in the Bob Dylan biopic \"I'm Not There\", singing the song \"Going to Acapulco\", with Calexico as his backing band, which was featured on the soundtrack of the film. \"Rolling Stone\" listed James among their \"20 New Guitar Gods\" along with fellow My Morning Jacket guitarist Carl Broemel. In 2008, James, along with former My Morning Jacket guitarist and cousin Johnny Quaid, formed Removador Recordings and Solutions record label. The label, as described on its website, functions \"on the simple principal of yielding the highest annual percentage of aural joy back into the hearts and minds of investors and shareholders with ease and convenience\". In 2009, he contributed vocals on The Decemberists' album \"The Hazards of Love\". On April 4 that year, James performed at the Radio City Music Hall, New York City, in the \"Change Begins Within\" concert benefitting the David Lynch Foundation. On July 7, James released \"Tribute To\", an EP covering George Harrison songs. A portion of the proceeds from the album were donated to the Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary. The EP was available on yimyames.com as both a digital download and a physical CD/LP. That same year, James and the rest of My Morning Jacket played themselves in \"My Morning Straitjacket\", an episode of the animated television series \"American Dad!",
"Laura Belli Laura Belli (born November 11, 1947 in Naples) is an Italian actress and singer. She appeared in films in Italy in the 1970s.",
"Richard James (musician) Richard James (born 27 March 1975) is a guitarist, bassist and singer-songwriter originally from Carmarthen, Wales. He was a founding member of the band Gorky's Zygotic Mynci, who split up in 2006. He performs and records as a solo artist, and as part of the bands Pen Pastwn and Locus. James was with Gorky's Zygotic Mynci throughout the band's lifespan, from 1991 to 2006, and appears on all their albums, initially mostly as a bassist. After John Lawrence left the band, James took Lawrence's place as guitarist. James wrote, and handles lead vocals on, some later Gorky's songs. His first solo album, \"The Seven Sleepers Den\", appeared in 2006. It featured backing vocals from Cate Le Bon (under her birth name of Cate Timothy). His second album was released on 21 June 2010 from Gwymon Records. Called \"We Went Riding\", it features the talents of Le Bon and Euros Childs. In April 2012, James released his third album, \"Pictures in the Morning\", also on Gwymon Records. Stylistically, it's a return to the sound of \"The Seven Sleepers Den\". James has curated the musical sides of both the annual Laugharne Weekend festival and In Chapters, a Cardiff-based event. His band Pen Pastwn evolved from the In Chapters house band. He has also long-collaborated with folk musician The Gentle Good. James's fourth solo album, \"All the New Highways\", was released in February 2015. It was originally a digital-only release on Bandcamp. In September the album was nominated for the 2014–2015 Welsh Music Prize. The album was released in physical form (vinyl and CD) in March 2016 on The state51 Conspiracy label. James has also composed music for the screen, including for the S4C drama series \"Cara Fi\" (2014) and for \"Tir\", the 2013 film and the 2015 series which followed it. He was nominated for a 2015 BAFTA Cymru award for Original Music for his work on \"Cara Fi\". Since 2016 James has participated in a collaborative project with his partner, musician and artist Angharad van Rjiswijk, called Locus, which among other work involved improvisational sound collages being performed live.",
"Lau Nau Lau Nau or Laura Naukkarinen (born 1980) is a composer, producer and musician from Finland. She plays also under the moniker Subatlantti, in IAX, a band formed with Kuupuu and Tsembla and is a visiting member of The Matti Bye Ensemble. She was also a member of free improv and psychedelic folk bands Kiila, Päivänsäde, the Anaksimandros, Avarus, Maailma, and the trio Hertta Lussu Ässä formed by fellow acid folk singer-songwriters Islaja and Kuupuu. Besides of composing and producing her own albums, Lau Nau accompanies silent films live and composes music for feature films, theatre plays, dance and sound installations. Her instrumentation ranges from everyday objects to classical instruments and analog synthesizers. She composed the soundtrack to the 2019 movie Land Without God, directed by Mannix Flynn. Lau Nau lives in the Finnish countryside of Kimito island with her husband and two sons.",
"James Marshall (producer) James Marshall is a British television producer and creator known for his work on \"The American Dream Project\", which was nominated for a 44th Daytime Creative Arts Emmy, and \"American Doers\", which is hosted on People Entertainment Weekly Network as of April 2017. Both shows were produced through his company, Happy Marshall Productions. Marshall was born in London, England and raised in Royal Windsor by his single mother, Linda Anne Edwards. Marshall is the middle child of three with an older sister Julia Elizabeth Porter, and a young brother, Peter George Edwards. In 2007, Marshall moved to New York to pursue his career in corporate America. In 2012, Marshall created his current company, Happy Marshall Productions, which produces web based content that has been hosted on sites including Netflix, Amazon Prime, People.com, Hulu, and iTunes.",
"Laura Marling Laura Beatrice Marling (born 1 February 1990) is a British folk singer-songwriter. She won the Brit Award for Best British Female Solo Artist at the 2011 Brit Awards and was nominated for the same award at the 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018 Brit Awards. Marling joined her older sisters in London at age 16 to pursue a career in music. She played with a number of groups and released her debut album, \"Alas, I Cannot Swim\", in 2008. Her first album, her second album \"I Speak Because I Can\", her fourth album \"Once I Was an Eagle\", and her seventh album \"Song for Our Daughter\" were nominated for the Mercury Music Prize in 2008, 2010, 2013, and 2020, respectively. Her sixth record, \"Semper Femina\", was also nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Folk Album category, as was \"Song for Our Daughter\". Her songwriting is associated with sex and relationships, the modern concept of womanhood and trauma. Marling is the youngest of three daughters. Her mother is a music teacher. Marling's father, Sir Charles William Somerset Marling, ran a recording studio, introduced her to folk music, and shaped her musical taste, an experience that Marling later described as, \"a bit of a blessing and a bit of a curse. ... [because] I couldn't slot myself into the age-appropriate genre\". She learned guitar at an early age. Marling attended Waverly Primary School in Finchampstead, Berkshire, and received a scholarship to attend Leighton Park School, a private Quaker school in Reading, Berkshire. During her secondary school years she felt uneasy around other people and was afraid of death. After completing her GCSEs at age 16, Marling joined her older sisters and settled in the outskirts of London. She soon joined a cluster of intertwined bands that were drawn to acoustic instruments and tradition-tinged melodies—the group formed a musical movement that was labelled \"nu-folk\" by the British press. Marling joined the original line-up of indie folk band Noah and the Whale and appears as a background vocalist on their debut album, \"Peaceful, the World Lays Me Down\"; however, she left the group before the album's 2008 release due to a dissolved relationship with the band's lead singer, Charlie Fink.",
"Jamesy P Jamesy P (born James Morgan, 18 May 1970, St. Vincent and the Grenadines) is a Vincentian musician (and former barber) who released a single in 2005 titled \"Nookie\". It was a soca hit and reached #14 on the UK Singles Chart, as well as selling well in the Caribbean, the United States and Canada.",
"James Laney James Laney may refer to:",
"Laura Forgia Laura Forgia, (born Laura Lena Forgia, 9 October 1982, in Angera), sometimes known as Lena Harva, is an Italian showgirl, model, actress and television presenter. She was born to an Italian father and Swedish mother.",
"Laura Sheeran Laura Sheeran (born 19 April 1987) is an Irish singer, musician, composer and artist. She is the cousin of Ed Sheeran. Along with Marc Aubele, she also performs as 'Glitterface', the frontperson and singer for Nanu Nanu, who describe themselves as \"an alien synth-pop\" act. Aside from her own solo career, she has performed with Fovea Hex, having been recruited for the group by Clodagh Simonds and is now also a member of RESOUND, a Dublin-based musical collective put together by Kate Ellis in 2011. Sheeran sings and performs on a loop station, bowed saw, melodica, accordion, flute, ukulele, and used a TC Helicon Voice Live 2 to manipulate her vocals and create harmonies. She frequently incorporates improvisation into her performances. Musicians with whom she performs include Cora Venus Lunny, Kate Ellis, Catríona Cannon, Linda Buckley and Marc Aubele. Short Films Documentaries"
] |
[] |
[
"no"
] |
Are both directors of films Kleine Scheidegg (Film) and His Butler'S Sister from the same country?
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Kleine Scheidegg (film) Kleine Scheidegg is a 1937 Swiss drama film directed by Richard Schweizer and starring Susanne Baader, Leopold Biberti and Emil Hegetschweiler. It is set around the Kleine Scheidegg Pass in Switzerland. It is part of the genre of mountain films, popular in the 1930s.
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[
"Madame and Her Niece Madame and Her Niece (German: Madame und ihre Nichte) is a 1969 West German drama film directed by Eberhard Schröder and starring Ruth-Maria Kubitschek, Edwige Fenech and Fred Williams. It is an adaptation of the 1884 short story \"Yvette\" by Guy de Maupassant updated to the modern era. The film's sets were designed by the art director Hertha Hareiter.",
"Der Herr der Liebe Der Herr der Liebe (The Master of Love) is a 1919 silent film directed in Germany by Fritz Lang. It was his second film. Carl de Vogt and Gilda Langer starred, as they had in Lang's debut feature, \"Halbblut\". Lang himself is said to have acted in a supporting role. The film is now considered to be lost. Residing in a castle in the Carpathian Mountains, Hungarian nobleman Vasile Disecu becomes infatuated with Suzette, the daughter of his neighbor. He mistakes Stefana, a maid who is secretly in love with him, for Suzette and makes love to her. When Yvette, his wife or mistress, finds out, she avenges herself with a liaison with Lazar, a Jewish peddler. Vasile imprisons Lazar. He kills Yvette and then himself.",
"Katharina Stemberger Katharina Stemberger-Eder (born 28 December 1968) is an Austrian actress. Stemberger studied cello at the conservatories in Vienna and Salzburg. After graduating in 1988, she began her acting training with Eva Zilcher. In 1996 she attended a three-month acting training at the Hollywood Acting Workshop in Los Angeles. Stemberger-Eder is married to cinematographer Fabian Eder married and has a daughter. She and her sister Julia Stemberger are the daughters of the tropical medicine Heinrich Stemberger and the actress Christa Schwertsik, who is married to the composer Kurt Schwertsik. Through her husband Fabian, Stemberger is the daughter-in-law of Bibiana Zeller (* 1928) and Otto Anton Eder (1930-2004). The couple Schwertsik and the Stemberger sisters make common theater, such. For example, with The Mikado, an operetta performed in the Volkstheater since 2008. As a UNESCO ambassador she campaigns for the vaccine against papillomaviruses.",
"Krischka Stoffels Krischka Stoffels, is a Namibian filmmaker. Krischka has made several critically acclaimed films including \"Gesie in die glas\" and \"Tjiraa\". Apart from direction, she is also a producer, writer, cinematographer and editor. She was born in Windhoek, Namibia. In 2010, she made her maiden short, \"Gesie in die glas\", which won the Special Mention Award at the Namibian Film and Theater Awards. With the success, she made her second short \"Tjiraa\". The film follows Vezuva, a young Ovaherero woman who returns from her studies abroad, in Germany, only to discover that her married cousin has passed away, and that according to tradition, she is expected to marry her cousin's widower. The film was financed by the Namibia Film Commission and was selected for screening at multiple international film festivals, including the African Diaspora International Film Festival.",
"Peter Millowitsch Peter Millowitsch is a German film and television actor. He is the director of the Volkstheater Millowitsch which he took over in 1999 following the death of his father Willy Millowitsch. His sister is the actress Mariele Millowitsch.",
"My Little Sister (2020 film) My Little Sister () is a 2020 Swiss drama film directed by Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear in the main competition section at the 70th Berlin International Film Festival. It was selected as the Swiss entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 93rd Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. A gifted playwright pushes her twin sibling, a famous stage actor, back into the limelight though he's suffering from cancer.",
"Nicole Heesters Nicole Heesters (born 14 February 1937) is a German actress. She was born in Potsdam and comes from a family of actors; her parents are Johannes Heesters, a Dutch-German actor, and Louise Ghijs, a Belgian stage actress. Her husband was film director Pit Fischer and one of her children, daughter Saskia Fischer, is also an actress. Nicole's older sister Wiesje (b. 1931) is a pianist in Vienna, Austria. Heesters lives in Hamburg.",
"Betty Schade Betty Schade (born Frida Feddersen; March 27, 1895 – March 27, 1982) was a German-born American actress of the silent era. She appeared in about 135 films between 1913 and 1921. Schade was born in Geestemünde (Bremerhaven), Germany and married first to actor Fritz Schade. The couple traveled to California in 1912-1913 and joined the original Mack Sennett stock company. Later the two were signed to contracts with Carl Laemmle's Universal Pictures. In 1917, she wed actor Ernest Shields and was contracted to Universal Pictures. She died in Los Angeles, California in 1982.",
"The Buchholz Family The Buchholz Family () is a 1944 German drama film directed by Carl Froelich and starring Henny Porten, Paul Westermeier, and Käthe Dyckhoff. It is a family chronicle set in late nineteenth century Berlin. It is based on an 1884 novel by Julius Stinde. It was followed by a second part \"Marriage of Affection\", released the same year. It was shot at the Tempelhof Studios in Berlin.",
"Ernst Marischka Ernst Marischka (2 January 1893 – 12 May 1963) was an Austrian screenwriter and film director. He wrote for 93 films between 1913 and 1962. He also directed 29 films between 1915 and 1962. He wrote and directed the Sissi trilogy - \"Sissi\" (1955), \"Sissi - The Young Empress\" (1956) and \"Sissi - Schicksalsjahre einer Kaiserin\" (1957). The films were based on the life of Empress Elisabeth of Austria. He was the brother of Hubert Marischka. He was named for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1946, for \"A Song to Remember\" (1945)."
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[
"no"
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Was William Patrick O'Connor or Dennis Smith (Ice Hockey) born first?
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Dennis O'Connor Dennis O'Connor may refer to:
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[
"William A. Smith William A. Smith or William Alexander Smith may refer to:",
"William J. Smith William J. Smith may refer to:",
"Denis O'Connor Denis O'Connor may refer to:",
"William H. Smith William H. Smith may refer to:",
"William C. Smith William C. Smith may refer to:",
"William Patrick William Patrick may refer to:",
"William S. Smith William S. Smith may refer to:",
"William F. Smith William F. Smith may refer to:",
"William O'Connor (fencer) William Scott O'Connor (May 23, 1864 – January 16, 1939) was an American epee and foil fencer who competed in the 1904 Summer Olympics. He won the silver medal in the singlestick competition. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and died in Manhattan.",
"Gord Smith (ice hockey) Gordon John Smith (born November 17, 1949) is a Canadian former ice hockey player. He is the older brother of former New York Islanders goaltender Billy Smith. Originally selected by the New York Rangers in the 1969 NHL Entry Draft, he would not have a chance to crack an NHL lineup until he was claimed by the Washington Capitals in the 1974 NHL Expansion Draft. Smith spent five seasons with the Capitals before he was claimed by the Winnipeg Jets in the 1979 NHL Expansion Draft."
] |
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[
"William Patrick O'Connor"
] |
Are both movies, Buddha'S Lost Children and I Was Born In Buenos Aires, from the same country?
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I Was Born in Buenos Aires I Was Born in Buenos Aires () is a 1959 Argentine film directed by Francisco Múgica. The lives of three young locals to making up a typical tango orchestra that leads to Europe.
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[
"Gabriela Böhm Gabriela Böhm (born 1964) is an independent documentary filmmaker from Buenos Aires, Argentina now living in Los Angeles. Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina to immigrant parents — survivors of the Holocaust — she completed high school and the army in Israel before she moved to the United States. Böhm is fluent in Spanish, English and Hebrew. She studied painting, sculpture, art history, photography and film at A Midrasha Le Morim Leomanut Art School in Israel (1985–1986), got a BFA from New York University Tisch School of the Arts (1990) and is an MFA candidate in documentary film at the Maine Media College. Her first feature-length documentary, \"Passages\" (2000), which she wrote, directed and produced with her company Böhm Productions, won the Best Documentary award at the Woodstock Film Festival. This personal film was a search into her family's history in an attempt to pass on its legacy to her unborn son. Böhm also wrote, directed, produced and co-edited \"The Longing: The Forgotten Jews of South America\" (2007), which has won numerous awards including Best Documentary at the Long Island Latino International Film Festival, a Telly Award for Religion and Spirituality, and Best Latino Film at the Santa Fe Film Festival. The film tells the story of modern-day Crypto-Jews (or marranos) forced to convert to Catholicism during the Inquisition in Spain and Portugal and who are now returning to their Jewish faith. The film has screened internationally at film festivals in the US, Canada, South America, Europe and Israel. Böhm wrote, directed, produced and co-edited \"Raquel: a marked woman\" (2014) which has screened in the US, Canada, Europe and Israel. Synopsis: Raquel's story is from another time, but resonates today. A mother, she was torn from her children and tricked into prostitution. In the early 20th century, thousands of Eastern European Jewish women were lured to Argentina and forced into prostitution. Others gave up. Not Raquel. Bravely, she exposed her oppressors. The film has been honored with a Bronze Telly Award — Non-Broadcast Film/Video — History/Biography (2015).",
"The Soul of the Children The Soul of the Children () is a 1951 Argentine drama film directed and written by Carlos F. Borcosque. The film stars Julio Esbrez, Paolo Loew, Carlos Perelli and Maruja Roig.",
"The Lost Steps The Lost Steps () is a 2001 Argentine and Spanish drama film directed by Manane Rodríguez and written by Rodríguez and Xavier Bermúdez. The film features Irene Visedo, Luis Brandoni, Federico Luppi, among others. The film tells the story of Mónica Erigaray (Irene Visedo), who is twenty years old and lives with her parents Ernesto Erigaray (Luis Brandoni) and Inés (Concha Velasco). Seventeen years ago the Erigarays left Argentina and moved to Spain to live a peaceful and quiet life. However, things change rather abruptly when a famous Argentinian writer named Bruno Leardi (Federico Luppi) claims that Mónica is in reality his granddaughter named Diana, daughter of his son Diego Liardi who disappeared during the Dirty War in Argentina. At one point in the film Ernesto Erigaray and his cohorts accost Bruno and make it clear that harm will come to him if he persists with his accusations and attempts to see Mónica. Erigaray decides to confront Bruno in his hotel room, but nothing is settled. The family ends up in a Court approved hearing and Ernesto Erigaray is accused of being the Argentine torturer known by his men as \"El Sapo\" (\"The Toad\") who did his nasty work in a place known as \"the Cesspit.\" Subsequently, DNA tests prove that Mónica is indeed the daughter of Diego Liardi and Sara Pereira (a Spanish citizen). Mónica leaves the Erigaray's and they are arrested and tried for the murder of a Spanish citizen and Mónica's illegal abduction. One year later Mónica travels to Buenos Aires and marches with the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. She drops by her grandfather's home and tells him Diana has come to call on him. The film ends with the dedication: Jonathan Holland, film critic for \"Variety\" magazine, gave the film a mixed review, and wrote, \"Built around the children of Argentina's \"desaparecidos\"—political victims who disappeared during the 1970s military dictatorship—\"The Lost Steps\" delivers a challenging political message in an easy-to-swallow manner.",
"Ana and the Others Ana and the Others () is a 2003 Argentine independent drama film directed and written by Celina Murga. Twenty-something Ana, now living in Buenos Aires, returns to her native city of Paraná. She meets old school mates, old friends, makes new ones, and starts to rethink her life, and perhaps changes her future forever. The film premiered in Argentina on 21 April 2003 and premiered in over 10 major countries worldwide.",
"The Lost City (2005 film) The Lost City is a 2005 American drama film directed by Andy García. It stars García, Dustin Hoffman, Inés Sastre, and Bill Murray. Fico Fellove is the owner of El Trópico, a swank nightclub in Cuba in 1958. Fico lives for his family and his music, while facing the harsh realities of Batista's dictatorial regime. His brother Ricardo becomes a revolutionary for Castro's rebel army, his brother Luis joins the student opposition, and his father Federico, a well-respected university professor, pushes for change by constitutional, peaceful means. When Ricardo is arrested and threatened with execution, Fico calls upon an old prep school friend Castel, now a police captain, for help. Ricardo is released from jail, and Fico offers to help him go to Miami or New York City, but Ricardo instead joins a rebel column headed by Che Guevara. Fico is approached by Meyer Lansky, of New York's Genovese crime family, who wishes to open up a gambling room at El Tropico. Fico, who intends for his club to remain a place of music, turns down the offer. When a bomb later explodes at the club, killing Fico's star entertainer (who is also his lover), Fico assumes that Lansky is behind it. However, in the increasingly unsettled climate, he cannot be certain. Luis becomes connected with a plot to seize the presidential palace, kill Batista, and restore democracy. The plot fails and most of the attackers are killed. Luis escapes but is killed later by Batista's secret police. At the urging of his mother, Fico tries to cheer up Luis’ distraught widow AuroraFico and Aurora fall in love. Castro's rebels seize power after Batista flees the country. Fidel Castro declares there will be no elections and Che Guevara oversees the arrests and summary execution of all those who supported the Batista regime. Among those to be executed is Captain Castel. Fico asks Ricardo, now a high-ranking officer in the new regime, to return the favor that Castel once carried out to save Ricardo's life, but Ricardo does nothing to save Castel. Ricardo visits his uncle Donoso, a tobacco farmer and cigar maker. Donoso feels that while Castro may be in power now, “the land endures” and says that the farm will next pass to Ricardo. Ricardo announces that the reason for his visit is to appropriate the farm for the state.",
"My Children My Children (Spanish: \"Mis hijos\") is a 1944 Mexican film. It stars Sara García.",
"The Lost City (1950 film) The Lost City (Spanish: La ciudad perdida) is a 1950 Mexican drama film directed by Agustín P. Delgado and starring Martha Roth, Roberto Romaña and Esperanza Issa. The film's sets were designed by the art director Ramón Rodríguez Granada.",
"Intimate Stories Historias mínimas (; released internationally as Intimate Stories) is a 2002 Argentine drama film directed by Carlos Sorín and written by Pablo Solarz. The film was produced by Martin Bardi, Leticia Cristi, and José María Morales. It features, among others, Javier Lombardo, Antonio Benedicti and Javiera Bravo. This road movie chronicles three individual yet intertwined stories of ordinary people striving to follow their dreams in life. The picture unfolds in the southern Argentine region of Patagonia, and it was filmed in the Santa Cruz Province, Patagonia. The film captures many small details that make a realistic and moving depiction of life in southern Argentina. The story follows three different persons travelling the Argentine Patagonia. The first is Don Justo, an elderly man who hands over the running of his grocery store to his overbearing son and daughter-in-law and escapes to search for his lost dog, named Badface. The second, Roberto, is a love-struck obsessive-compulsive traveling salesman who drives to San Julián, to surprise one of his clients by bringing a cake for her child's birthday. Finally, María Flores is a lower class woman who travels to San Julián with her daughter because she has won a spot on \"Multicoloured Casino\", a fusty TV game show. In a neo-realist fashion, the film director used mostly non-professional actors; the only professional actor was Javier Lombardo (Roberto). The film was first presented at the Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival, Spain on September 26, 2002, and was released in Argentina on October 24, 2002. It was featured at various film festivals, including the International Film Festival Rotterdam; the Latin America Film Festival, Poland; the Karlovy Vary Film Festival, Czech Republic; the Copenhagen International Film Festival, Denmark; the Bergen International Film Festival, Norway; the Spanish Film Festival, Philippines; Havana Film Festival, Cuba; the Cartagena Film Festival, Colombia; the Festróia - Tróia International Film Festival, Portugal; the Fribourg International Film Festival, Switzerland; the Tromsø International Film Festival, Norway, and the Uruguay International Film Festival, Uruguay. In the United States it was shown at the Sundance Film Festival in January, 2003, then released in New York City on March 4, 2005.",
"With My Heart in Yambo With My Heart in Yambo () is a 2011 Ecuadorian documentary film written and directed by María Fernanda Restrepo. The film documents the abduction of Restrepo's two brothers in 1988. In 2012 it won the Havana Star Prize for Best Documentary at the Havana Film Festival New York.",
"I, the Worst of All I, the Worst of All () is an Argentinian film directed by María Luisa Bemberg. The film was released in 1990 and is a biopic on the life of Juana Inés de la Cruz. It was based on Octavio Paz's \"Sor Juana: Or, the Traps of Faith\". The film premiered at the 47th Venice International Film Festival where it received the OCIC Award - Honorable Mention. The film was selected as the Argentine entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 63rd Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. In Mexico in the 17th century, the Viceroy of New Spain and the newly elected Archbishop discuss how they will rule. The Archbishop sends a letter to the convent where Sor Juana lives informing the abbess that his first official order of business will be to visit their convent and to meet Sor Juana. For the occasion Sor Juana presents a play she has been working on. The Viceroy and his wife, the Vicereine are impressed with Sor Juana's writing. The Archbishop on the other hand is disturbed that the convent is so lax. He secretly meets with a few nuns and persuades them to elect a more formal abbess. In the meantime Sor Juana and the Vicereine grow close. The Vicereine warns Sor Juana to be careful about how she speaks and what she reads and tells her of an auto-da-fé she witnessed in which hundreds were burned. Other nuns also approach Sor Juana and ask her to run for election to be the abbess, but Sor Juana refuses saying that she is in the middle of writing an epic poem which she cannot give up. When the new abbess is elected she institutes a vow of poverty and tries to take away Sor Juana's books but the Vicereine insists that she keeps them. The Archbishop then attempts to censor Sor Juana's books based on a poem she has written about the Vicereine which he claims is sinful. Sor Juana's books are taken away but when the Viceroy hears of this he demands they be returned to her. The Vicereine tells Sor Juana that as long as she and her husband are in Mexico she will be protected. Sometime later the Viceroy learns that he has lost favour with the King of Spain and is to be replaced."
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[
"no"
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Are both Solace (2006 film) and Frontier Woman from the same country?
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Solace (2006 film) Solace (; (lit. "Things You Say When You're in Love") is a 2006 South Korean film, and the directorial debut of Byeon Seung-wook. It stars Han Suk-kyu as a pharmacist who cares for his mentally disabled brother, and the relationship he builds with a debt-saddled woman (played by Kim Ji-soo) who sells fake designer clothes. In-ku is a pharmacist who runs his own store in Seoul. Although approaching middle age, he still lives with his elderly mother and mentally disabled older brother, In-seob. In-ku spends much of his time caring for his brother, and in the recent past had to end a relationship with his girlfriend, as her parents would not accept In-seob into their family. Hye-ran earns a living by selling fake designer clothes on a stall in Seoul's Dongdaemun shopping mall, a practise which has led to trouble with the police on several occasions. She is also saddled with a crippling debt, inherited from her now-deceased father. While Hye-ran enjoys a night out with her family at a karaoke box, her younger sister announces that she is pregnant and wants to get married. Fearing that she will be left to pay their debt by herself, Hye-ran upsets her sister by telling her to wait and get an abortion. Meanwhile, In-ku gets a surprise visit from his ex-girlfriend, who wants to see him one last time before she marries another man. After sharing a meal they go to a hotel for sex, but once there he has second thoughts and walks away. Back at his shop, In-ku sits and drinks a beer by himself, when Hye-ran comes in looking for something to help her sleep. One thing leads to another, and they end up getting drunk at a local bar, before ending up back at the same hotel where they spend the night together. In the early hours of the following morning, Hye-ran sneaks away without saying a word, while In-ku pretends to be asleep. In-ku and Hye-ran keep running into each other, gradually building up a friendship. They arrange a date, but when In-ku goes to meet her at work he arrives just in time to see her being taken away by the police, her stall having been raided again. At home, In-ku gets angry with his brother who has been throwing hysterics, though they later make up.
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[
"Untamed Frontier Untamed Frontier is a 1952 American Technicolor Western film directed by Hugo Fregonese and starring Joseph Cotten, Shelley Winters and Scott Brady. The film, featuring the working title of \"The Untamed\" featured the feature film debuts of Suzan Ball and Fess Parker. To the irritation of the US Government, the Denbow family freeze out homesteaders by denying access across their land, using the government land for grazing their cattle herds. Meanwhile, to evade a murder charge, Glenn Denbow marries the only witness, Jane, who's conveniently in love with him, but favors the settlers. When Glenn goes back to his blackmailing old flame Lottie, a warm regard develops between Jane and cousin Kirk Denbow. Things come to a head when an impending range war coincides with a rustling foray.",
"The Trip to Bountiful The Trip to Bountiful is a 1985 American drama film directed by Peter Masterson and starring Geraldine Page, John Heard, Carlin Glynn, Richard Bradford and Rebecca De Mornay. It was adapted by Horton Foote from his 1953 play of the same name. The film features a soundtrack by J.A.C. Redford featuring Will Thompson's \"Softly and Tenderly\" sung by Cynthia Clawson. Geraldine Page won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance as Mrs. Watts and Horton Foote was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. The film is partially set in the titular community of Bountiful, a fictitious Texas town. Although part of the film is set in Houston, Texas (as was the original play), the movie was shot in Dallas. The film, set in the post-World War II 1940s, tells the story of an elderly woman, Carrie Watts (Page), who wants to return to her home, the small, rural, agriculture-based town of Bountiful near the Texas Gulf coast between Houston and Corpus Christi, where she grew up, but she's frequently stopped from leaving Houston by her daughter-in-law and her overprotective son (Heard), who will not let her travel alone. Her son and daughter-in-law both know that the town has long since disappeared, due to the Depression. Long-term out-migration was caused by the draw-down of all the town's able-bodied men to the wartime draft calls and by the demand for industrial workers in the war production plants of the big cities. Old Mrs. Watts is determined to outwit her son and bossy daughter-in-law, and sets out to catch a train, only to find that trains do not go to Bountiful anymore. She eventually boards a bus to a town near her childhood home. On the journey, she befriends a woman traveling alone (DeMornay) and reminisces about her younger years and grieves for her lost relatives. Her son and daughter-in-law eventually track her down, with the help of the local police force; however, Mrs. Watts is determined. The local sheriff, moved by her yearning to visit her girlhood home, offers to drive her out to what remains of Bountiful. The town is deserted and the few remaining structures are derelict. Mrs.",
"Solitaire (1991 film) Solitaire is a Canadian drama film, directed by Francis Damberger and released in 1991. The film stars Paul Coeur and Valerie Pearson as Burt and Maggie, smalltown residents whose friendship is tested when Al (Michael Hogan), Burt's high school best friend and Maggie's ex-fiancé, returns home for a visit on Christmas Eve for the first time since his enlistment in the Vietnam War. The film won seven Rosies at the Alberta Film and Television Awards in 1992, including Best Director (Damberger), Best Actor (Coeur), Best Actress (Pearson), Best Screenplay (Damberger), Best Art Direction (John Blackie) and Best Editing (Lenka Svab). It received four Genie Award nominations at the 13th Genie Awards, for Best Actress (Pearson), Best Supporting Actor (Hogan), Best Original Screenplay (Damberger) and Best Original Score (Michael Becker). Hogan won the Genie for Best Supporting Actor.",
"The Frontiersman The Frontiersman is a 1927 American Western silent film directed by Reginald Barker and written by Tom Miranda and Gordon Rigby. The film stars Tim McCoy, Claire Windsor, Tom O'Brien, Russell Simpson, Lillian Leighton and Louise Lorraine. The film was released on June 11, 1927, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.",
"The Frontier (2014 film) The Frontier is a 2014 American drama film directed by Matt Rabinowitz and written by Rabinowitz and Carlos Colunga. The film stars Max Gail, along with Coleman Kelly and Anastassia Sendyk. The film premiered at SXSW on March 7, 2014. The film was released on May 5, 2015, by Virgil Films & Entertainment. An estranged son travels back home to confront his overbearing father to see if there is any relationship left between them. Sean, a retired literature professor and civic activist, writes a letter to his estranged son, Tennessee, a ranch hand. Tennessee is uncertain how to respond, but knowing he should see his aging father, he decides to go home. Tennessee arrives just as Nina, Sean's personal trainer fresh off a bad breakup, accepts Sean's offer to move in and help him write his memoirs. The tension between father and son is ever-present. As Sean and Nina work, Tennessee avoids his overbearing father with fix-up projects around the house. One evening after Nina has gone out, Sean and Tennessee find themselves alone in the house for the first time. The Theatrical Release was in New York City on September 12, 2014. The following week on September 19, 2014 the film opened in Los Angeles. Critical reception for \"The Frontier\" has been mixed and the film holds a rating of 40 on Metacritic based on 4 reviews, indicating mixed or average reviews. \"The Hollywood Reporter\" and the \"Village Voice\" both panned the film overall, with the \"Village Voice\" commenting that the arguing between Gail and Kelly's characters made things a bit too tense, stating that \"Things improve considerably once both they and the film as a whole mellow out, as Rabinowitz handles reconciliation better than conflict, but the reprieve is short-lived.\" The film won the following awards:",
"Frontier Revenge Frontier Revenge is a 1948 American Western film written and directed by Ray Taylor and starring Lash LaRue and Al \"Fuzzy\" St. John. The film is a remake of Ray Taylor's \"Panamint's Bad Man\" (1938). Filmed at the Corriganville Movie Ranch, the film is neither set on a frontier nor is any revenge depicted. Extensive footage from this film was reused along with the return of Duce Rago in \"The Black Lash\" (1952). Marshal Lash and Deputy Fuzzy impersonate an outlaw duo from Texas named the Dawsons in order to stop a series of robberies. They are helped by a marshal's widow and an undercover government operator.",
"Frontier Romance Frontier Romance is a 1929 MGM short silent film short in two-color Technicolor. It was the twelfth and final film produced as part of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's \"Great Events\" series. A romantic historical drama, the film depicts George Rogers Clark and other American colonists as they interact with Native American tribespeople. The film was shot at the Tec-Art Studio in Hollywood. \"Frontier Romance\" is believed to be lost.",
"Fighting Frontier Fighting Frontier is a 1943 Western film. A detective goes undercover as a bandit.",
"Irene Miracle Irene Miracle is an American film and television actress and director. Miracle was raised in Oklahoma of \"French Arcadian ... Scots-Irish, Russian, French and Osage\" descent. Her first film appearance was as a murder victim in \"Night Train Murders\" (1975), an Italian \"Last House on the Left\"-clone. Her most prestigious role was in Alan Parker's \"Midnight Express\" (1978), a worldwide box office success. For her role as the girlfriend of the incarcerated protagonist, she won the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year - Female. Miracle followed that film with another major role in Dario Argento's \"Inferno\" (1980), as a woman who comes to believe the New York City apartment building she lives in also houses a centuries-old witch. Since then, she has continued her acting work, while also writing, directing and producing. In 1979, Miracle appeared in the episode \"Now You See Her...\" of the NBC television crime drama series \"The Eddie Capra Mysteries\". In 2009, Miracle wrote and directed the short drama film \"Changeling ( Dawnland)\".",
"Finding Dawn Finding Dawn is a 2006 documentary film by Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh looking into the fate of an estimated 500 Canadian Aboriginal women who have been murdered or have gone missing over the past 30 years. The film begins with the story of Dawn Crey: one of 60 women, a third of them Aboriginal, who have disappeared from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside over a 20-year period. Crey's remains were among those found on the property of British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton. However, not enough of Dawn's DNA was found to list her as one of the murder victims at the trial. The film introduces viewers to Dawn's sister and brother, and their involvement in the annual Women's Memorial March in Vancouver. The film then focuses on BC's Highway 16, known as the Highway of Tears, which runs between Prince Rupert, British Columbia and Prince George, British Columbia, looking at the fate of Ramona Wilson. Wilson was one of nine women – all but one of them Native – who have gone missing or been murdered on that stretch of road since the 1990s. Welsh also filmed in Saskatoon, where a woman named Daleen Kay Bosse disappeared in 2004. She went missing in May but a criminal investigation didn't begin until the following January. In the film, Daleen’s parents and friends talk about their difficulty in getting Saskatoon police to take Daleen’s disappearance seriously. Native rights activists Janice Acoose and Fay Blaney are interviewed in the film. Christine Welsh has produced, written and directed films for more than 30 years. She is an associate professor at the University of Victoria, where she teaches courses in indigenous women’s studies and indigenous cinema. \"Finding Dawn\" is referenced in the later 2015 documentary \"Highway of Tears\", which notes its impact on native viewers."
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[
"no"
] |
Were both Graeme Hart and Estes Banks, born in the same place?
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Graeme Banks Graeme Banks (born 19 May 1969) is an Australian diver. He competed in two events at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
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[
"Corey Hart Corey Hart may refer to:",
"Benjamin Hart Benjamin Hart (born 17 October 1977) is an English actor best known for his roles as Foz in the British soap opera \"Hollyoaks\", and as Adam Rhodes in the Australian soap opera \"Neighbours\". Hart attended Rodborough Technology College in Godalming, Surrey. He subsequently appeared for eight months as Foz in English soap opera \"Hollyoaks\", and had a role in the WE tv series \"American Princess\". Hart began a role in Australian soap opera \"Neighbours\" in 2007 as Adam Rhodes, a British police officer-turned construction worker. He had a lead role in the LGBT comedy \"Mr. Right\", released in 2009, playing the role of Lars, one of the lead characters. As a model scout, Hart helped to launch the career of English model and actress Lily Cole. He appeared as a model in videos for Madonna, the Spice Girls and Dannii Minogue, and in TV commercials including an international campaign as the Diet Coke boy, and for Nokia and Eden Springs water.",
"Matthew Hart Matthew Norman Hart (born 16 May 1972) is a former New Zealand cricketer. Hart, a left-arm orthodox spinner, played in 14 Tests between 1994 and 1996, claiming 29 wickets including one five-wicket haul against South Africa. He also appeared in 13 ODIs, claiming 13 wickets, including a then-record haul by a New Zealander in One Day Internationals, claiming 5/22 against the West Indies in 1994. His international career lasted from 1994 to 2002, eventually losing his place in the team to Daniel Vettori. Hart retired from cricket in 2005 at the age of 33, citing a loss of enthusiasm for the game. His brother, Robbie, also played cricket as a wicket-keeper for Northern Districts Knights and New Zealand.",
"Brett Hart Brett Hart may refer to:",
"Wayne Hart (curler) Wayne Hart (born February 13, 1949) is a Canadian curler. He is a and a 1986 Labatt Brier champion. He played at the 1988 Winter Olympics when curling was a demonstration sport, Canadian men's team won bronze medal.",
"Keith Hart Keith Hart may refer to:",
"Bruce Hart Bruce Hart may refer to:",
"Andrew Hart Andrew Hart may refer to:",
"Bill Hart (footballer) William Robert Hart (1 April 1923 – March 1990) was an English professional footballer who played as a right half. Born in North Shields, Hart played for Newcastle United, Chesterfield and Bradford City. For Bradford City he made 25 appearances in the Football League.",
"Ashley Hart (cricketer) Ashley Hart (born 10 July 1956) is a New Zealand cricketer. He played in 31 first-class and 17 List A matches for Canterbury from 1981 to 1986."
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[
"no"
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When did the director of film Invasion (1966 Film) die?
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Invasión Invasión is an Argentine film released in 1969 and directed by Hugo Santiago, who had also written the script together with Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares. Its style is intermediate between classic cinema and the French "nouvelle vague". A group of men commanded by an older man attempts to stop an invasion to the city of Aquilea. The invaders are met by common men who defend the city, ignored by the people in general, but with the development of the film it is understood that the invasion is absolute and impossible to define. The defeat of the defenders is evident from the beginning, as in the "Trojan War." Part of the film was shot in the Boca Juniors stadium. Some negative rolls were lost during the Argentine dictatorship of 1976–1983. The film was restored in France in the 1990s using the surviving negatives and lower-quality positives. Invasión was premiered at the Cannes International Film Festival during the first Directors Fortnight and won an award later in 1969 at the Locarno International Film Festival.
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[
"Invasion from Inner Earth Invasion from Inner Earth (1974) is an apocalyptic science fiction film, starring Paul Bentzen and Debbi Pick. The film was directed by Bill Rebane, the same director of \"Monster A Go-Go\" (1965), and \"The Giant Spider Invasion\" (1975). The film, also known as Hell Fire and They, was inspired by the British film \"The Strange World of Planet X\" (1957), and filmed in the style of thrillers directed by Alfred Hitchcock. A group of pilots in the Canadian wilderness begin to hear strange reports over their radios about planes crashing, cars stalling, and a deadly plague which has gripped the planet. As the plot continues, it's clear that Earth is in the midst of an invasion. The pilots barricade themselves in a cabin in the woods and wait for impending doom. Creature Feature gave the film one star, calling it lumbering , the effects awful and the ending incomprehensible, Fantastic Movie Musings found it almost completely devoid of entertainment value.",
"Invaders from Mars (1953 film) Invaders from Mars is a 1953 independently made American SuperCinecolor science fiction film directed by William Cameron Menzies and starring Jimmy Hunt, Helena Carter, Arthur Franz, Morris Ankrum, Leif Erickson, and Hillary Brooke. It was produced by Edward L. Alperson Jr and was distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox. Awakened during a thunderstorm, youngster David MacLean witnesses a brightly lit flying saucer disappear underground in the large sand pit behind his home. When his father investigates, he returns a changed man; soon David's mother, a young neighbor girl, and others, begin to act in the same way. Begging the police for help, David's panicked story is heard by Dr. Pat Blake, who takes him to astronomer Dr. Stuart Kelston. David soon convinces Kelston, who comes to believe that this is an invading vanguard from Mars. \"Invaders from Mars\" recounts its story from the point of view of an older child in an adult world heading into crisis. It was developed from a scenario by Richard Blake and based on a story treatment by John Tucker Battle, who was inspired by a dream recounted to him by his wife. The film was rushed into production to show in theaters before George Pal's \"War of the Worlds\" (also 1953), becoming the first feature film to show aliens and their spacecraft in color. Late one night, youngster David MacLean (Jimmy Hunt) is awakened by a loud thunderstorm. From his bedroom window, he sees a large flying saucer descend and disappear into the sandpit area behind his home. After rushing to tell his parents, his scientist father (Leif Erickson) goes to investigate David's claim. When his father returns much later in the morning, David notices an unusual red puncture along the hairline on the back of his father's neck; his father is now behaving in a cold and hostile manner. David soon begins to realize that something is very wrong: he notices that certain townsfolk are acting in exactly the same way. Through his telescope, David sees child neighbor Kathy Wilson suddenly disappear underground while walking in the sandpit. David flees to the police station for help and is eventually placed under the protection of health-department physician Dr. Pat Blake (Helena Carter), who slowly begins to believe his crazy story. With the help of local astronomer Dr. Stuart Kelston (Arthur Franz) and Dr.",
"Invasion (2017 film) Invasion () is a 2017 Iranian crime film directed by Shahram Mokri. It was screened in the Panorama section at the 68th Berlin International Film Festival.",
"Extraña invasión Extraña invasión, also known as Stay Tuned for Terror, is a 1965 Argentine-American science fiction film directed by Emilio Vieyra and starring Richard Conte, Jorge Rivera López, Eddie Pequenino, Anna Strasberg and Mónica Cahen D'Anvers. A young Adolfo Aristarain was assistant director during filming. In Clearview, a town in the South of the U.S., strange waves begin to appear on the TV sets, hypnotizing the very young and the very old. Children and old people begin to wander around town in a zombie-like state. When the signal drops, there is a violent reaction and the army must be called in. The film was filmed entirely in Ciudad Jardin.",
"The Night Invader The Night Invader is a 1943 British, black-and-white, drama, thriller, war film, directed by Herbert Mason, produced by Max Milder for Warner Bros. - First National Productions Ltd. the British subsidiary of Warner Bros. and starring Ronald Shiner as Witsen, Anne Crawford and David Farrar. Dick Marlow, a British agent, has parachuted into the occupied Netherlands to retrieve vital documents. Whilst on the trail of the papers, he poses occasionally as an American journalist and a Gestapo officer. He meets and falls in love with a Dutch woman who professes solidarity with the British, but matters become complicated and dangerous when it transpires that the woman's brother is in possession of the documents Dick Marlow needs, and is far less kindly disposed towards the British than his sister. No print of \"The Night Invader\" is known to survive and the film is classed as \"missing, believed lost\".",
"Don Siegel Donald Siegel (; October 26, 1912 – April 20, 1991) was an American film and television director and producer. Siegel was described by \"The New York Times\" as \"a director of tough, cynical and forthright action-adventure films whose taut plots centered on individualistic loners\". He directed the science fiction horror film \"Invasion of the Body Snatchers\" (1956), as well as five films with Clint Eastwood, including the police thriller \"Dirty Harry\" (1971) and the prison drama \"Escape from Alcatraz\" (1979). He also directed John Wayne's final film, the Western \"The Shootist\" (1976). Siegel was born in 1912 to a Jewish family in Chicago; his father was a mandolin player. Siegel attended schools in New York and later graduated from Jesus College, Cambridge in England. For a short time he studied at Beaux Arts in Paris, but left at age 20 and later went to Los Angeles. Siegel found work in the Warner Bros. film library after meeting producer Hal Wallis, and later rose to head of the Montage Department, where he directed thousands of montages, including the opening montage for \"Casablanca\". In 1945, two shorts he directed, \"Star in the Night\" and \"Hitler Lives\", won Academy Awards, which launched his career as a feature director. He directed whatever material came his way, often transcending the limitations of budget and script to produce interesting and adept works. He made the original \"Invasion of the Body Snatchers\" (1956), described by \"The Guardian\" in 2014 as a \"fatalistic masterpiece\" and \"a touchstone for the sci-fi genre\" which spawned three remakes. For television, he directed two episodes of \"The Twilight Zone\", \"Uncle Simon\" (1963) and \"The Self-Improvement of Salvadore Ross\" (1964), and was the producer of \"The Legend of Jesse James\" (1965). He worked with Eli Wallach in \"The Lineup\", Elvis Presley and Dolores del Río in \"Flaming Star\" (1960), with Steve McQueen in \"Hell Is for Heroes\" and Lee Marvin in the influential \"The Killers\" (1964) before directing five of Eastwood's films that were commercially successful in addition to being well received by critics.",
"Philip S. Goodman Philip Solomon Goodman (February 20, 1926 – May 2, 2015) was an American screenwriter, producer, and director. He was perhaps best known for directing the drama film \"We Shall Return\" (1963), starring Cesar Romero. He also wrote for television series such as \"Profiles in Courage\", \"Danger\", \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents\", \"Rocky King Detective\", and \"Johnny Staccato\". He also directed plays at the Actors Studio. Goodman was born in New York City to Flora and Solomon Goodman. He graduated from Brooklyn College and the University of Southern California (USC). He served in the U.S. Army from 1944 to 1946 during World War II. He was married to Evelyn Twersky and had two children, Nicholas, a producer, and Jody, a lawyer. Goodman died on May 2, 2015 in New York City, aged 89.",
"Invisible Invaders Invisible Invaders is a 1959 science fiction film starring John Agar, Jean Byron, John Carradine and Philip Tonge. It was produced by Robert E. Kent, directed by Edward L. Cahn and written by Samuel Newman. Dr. Karol Noymann (Carradine), an atomic scientist, is killed in a laboratory explosion. His colleague, Dr. Adam Penner (Tonge), is disturbed by the accident and resigns his position and calls for changes. At Dr. Noymann's funeral, an invisible alien takes over Noymann's dead body. The alien, in Noymann's body, visits Dr. Penner and tells him the Earth must surrender or an alien force will invade and take over the Earth by inhabiting the dead and causing chaos. The alien demonstrates to Penner that they are able to make things invisible. Penner tells his daughter Phyllis (Byron) and Dr. John Lamont (Robert Hutton) about the experience and asks Dr. Lamont to relay the message to the government in Washington, D.C. The government ignores the warning and Dr. Penner is labeled a crank by the media. Dr. Penner takes his daughter and Dr. Lamont to Dr. Noymann's grave, where they are visited by an invisible alien. Later, at the site of a plane crash, another alien takes over the body of a dead pilot (Don Kennedy), goes to a hockey game, chokes the announcer, and issues an ultimatum for the Earth to surrender. Another alien takes over a dead body from a car crash and issues the same ultimatum at a different sporting event. The media announce the threat and the governments of the world decide to resist the invasion. Aliens take over more dead bodies and blow up dams, cause fires and destroy buildings. Maj. Bruce Jay (Agar) arrives to take Dr. Penner, Phyllis and Dr. Lamont to a secret bunker. On the way, they are confronted by a scared farmer (Hal Torey) who tries to take their vehicle. Maj. Jay kills the farmer and they proceed to the bunker while an alien takes over the dead farmer's body. At the bunker, they are contacted by the government and tasked with stopping the alien invasion. They determine that the aliens are radioactive, and decide to capture an alien to conduct tests on. They attempt to spray an alien with acrylic to seal it in plastic, but this fails.",
"The Invaders (1912 film) The Invaders is a 1912 American silent film Western film directed by Francis Ford and Thomas H. Ince. The film was released on the DVD compilation \"More Treasures from American Film Archives\", in 2004.",
"Invader (film) Invader is a 1992 direct-to-video science fiction film by Philip J. Cook, starring Hans Bachmann, A. Thomas Smith and Rick Foucheux. It is the story of a journalist who uncovers an extraterrestrial entity taking over an air force base in Washington, D.C. and must foil its plans of world domination. Most of \"Invader\" was produced independently in 1989 by Philip Cook and producer John Ellis, since Cook's previous film \"Beyond the Rising Moon\" had not been enough of a success to attract investors. Cook shot all the inexpensive dialogue sequences, and the result impressed Menahem Golan such that he agreed to finance the remainder of the film. \"Invader\" was originally released on VHS by Trimark and LaserDisc by Pioneer Corporation, and earned some positive reviews. In 2006, \"Invader\" was recut by Cook's production company Eagle Films for its DVD release. The new release features CGI special effects to augment the in-camera effects from 1992. In the opening sequence, four airmen from Clark Air Base in Washington D.C. frantically attempt to escape the base. A contingent of soldiers soon blocks their path. Most of the escapees are shot, but one sees a flying saucer which burns him to a crisp with its energy weapon. Frank Mccall (Hans Bachmann) is an overqualified photojournalist writing about two-headed dogs and alien abductions for the sleazy \"National Scandal\" tabloid. When the airman's charred corpse is found, he is assigned to the story. When government agents try to keep him out, he resolves to sneak into the airbase, where a top-secret fighter plane is to be demoed that night. The plane is equipped with an experimental software system called A.S.M.O.D.S, which suddenly malfunctions mid-demo, crashing the plane. As the disappointed top brass go home, Mccall is intercepted by Captain Anders (A. Thomas Smith), who orders him taken into custody and his camera seized. Sinister men in black wrench Mccall away, taking him to a storage compartment to be injected with a glowing green substance and brainwashed with an electronic apparatus. Anders and Colonel Faraday (Rick Foucheux) arrive in time to stop them, and the men shoot themselves. Anders takes Mccall into custody himself, while Faraday returns to the base. Suddenly, the flying saucer from the opening appears."
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"7 December 2013"
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Which film has the director who died earlier, Pagalil Oru Iravu or The Thin Man Goes Home?
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Or Iravu Ore Iravu () is a 1951 Indian Tamil-language film directed by P. Neelakantan and co-written by him and C. N. Annadurai. Produced by AVM Productions, it is based on Annadurai's play of the same name. The film stars K. R. Ramasamy, reprising his role from the play. It was released on 11 April 1951 and received well by critics, but failed commercially. A thief breaks into a rich man's house without knowing that the man is his own father who had abandoned him and his mother long ago. "Or Iravu" was a stage play written by C. N. Annadurai. It was originally written for K. R. Ramasamy's Krishnan memorial drama company by Annadurai. A. V. Meiyappan of AVM Productions decided to make a film based on the play. Annadurai was paid 10,000 for writing the screenplay. Annadurai went to AVM studios and wrote the entire script and dialogues totalling 300 pages in a single night. The screenplay was later modified by the director and the producer of the film. This was the third film to be made based on Annadurai's plays after "Velaikari" (1949) and "Nallathambi" (1949). P. Neelakantan, who had begun working for AVM in the 1947 film "Naam Iruvar" as assistant director, made his directorial debut with this film. Per Annadurai's recommendation, Ramasamy was hired to play the hero, reprising his role from the play. The play depicted events that happen in a single night, and older incidents were depicted using flashbacks, but in the film version, flashbacks were replaced with a linear narration. The completed film was 14,980 feet in length. The music was composed by R. Sudarsanam. Lyrics were by Mahakavi Bharathiyar, Bharathidasan, T. K. Shanmugam, K. P. Kamatchi Sundharam & Ku. Ma. Balasubramaniam. The song "Ayya Saami Aaoji Saami" is based on "Chico Chico from Puerto Rico" from the 1945 American film "Doll Face". Songs list "Or Iravu" was released on 11 April 1951.
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[
"The Thin Man (film series) The Thin Man is a series of popular films featuring detective characters Nick and Nora Charles, of which the first was based on the novel of the same name by Dashiell Hammett. The films are:",
"Perakas Rajaram Perakas Rajaram (also known as R. Perakas) is a Malaysian film director, producer, writer and actor. He is well known for directing highly acclaimed Malaysia Tamil film\"Vennira Iravuggal\". He also played a minor role in \"Jagat\". As Director : As Actor :",
"Pa. Ranjith Pa. Ranjith is an Indian filmmaker who works at Tamil films. He made his directorial debut with the 2012 romantic comedy \"Attakathi\", before earning unanimously positive reviews for his second film, the political drama \"Madras\" (2014). In 2016, he wrote and directed the gangster-drama \"Kabali\" and in 2018, \"Kaala\" both starring Rajinikanth. In 2021, he directed Sarpatta Parambarai, which was well received by both critics and audiences. Pa. Ranjith was born at Karalapakkam, Avadi, Chennai. He has two brothers - Prabhu and Saravana. He graduated from Government College of Fine Arts, Chennai, and has described how his travels to and from his college often helped create inspiration for film ideas. Ranjith studied in multiple schools - Karapakkam Panchayat Union School, Veliyur Government Higher Secondary School and Avadi Government School. His maternal uncles were drawing artists and Ranjith got the inspiration from them towards drawing, during his childhood; that eventually made him enroll in Fine Arts College. He is married to Anitha and the couple has a daughter and a son. Anitha was a junior to Ranjith in college. During his college days, he joined the film chamber and began watching world cinema, regularly attending annual film festivals. He gained inspiration from films including \"The Battle of Algiers\" (1966) and \"City of God\" (2002), stating they changed his thinking of cinema and revealed that they had a deep impact on him. Ranjith has been known to use symbolism in his movies to exhibit ongoing social problems which otherwise have trouble reaching the masses due to restrictions by Central Board of Film Certification in using actual references of caste based exploitation in movies. Ranjith joined the film industry as an assistant director and first worked on Shiva Shanmugam's \"Thagapansamy\" (2006), which he has since revealed as an \"unmemorable stint\", before moving on to apprentice under film makers N. Linguswamy and Venkat Prabhu. He initially helped prepare a storyboard for a Malaysian album that Venkat Prabhu had been working on in 2006, before gaining trust and being allowed to work closely with him during the making of \"Chennai 600028\" (2007).",
"Kullamani Kullamani (1952–2013) was an Indian actor and comedian who appeared in South Indian films. He acted over 500 films. He is known for films like \"Karagattakaran\", \"Apoorva Sagodharargal\", \"Panakkaran\", \"My Dear Marthandan\", and many more. He died after a month-long hospitalization in the city on 25 December 2013. He was 61. He had been admitted to the Kilpauk Government Hospital because of kidney failure.",
"Asathal Asathal is a 2001 Indian Tamil-language comedy film written and directed by P. Vasu. The film featured Sathyaraj and Ramya Krishnan in the leading roles. Produced by Mala Cine Creations and featuring music composed by Bharathwaj, the film was released on 18 May 2001. The movie is a remake of 1990 Malayalam movie \"Thoovalsparsham\" which was earlier remade in Tamil as \"Thayamma\" and in Telugu as \"Chinnari Muddula Papa.\" \"Thoovalsparsham\" was itself was based on the 1987 English movie \"Three Men and a Baby\" which in turn was based on the 1985 French movie \"Three Men and a Cradle\". The film was produced by S. Rajaram, a theatre owner and film distributor under his production house Mala Cine Combines. He signed on P. Vasu to write and direct the comedy film, with the director collaborating with Sathyaraj again after several previous successful ventures. Scenes which showed the characters in a house were filmed in a bungalow at Neelankarai, Chennai. Sathyaraj worked on \"Asathal\" alongside two other ventures \"Kunguma Pottu Gounder\" and the later-shelved \"Mr. Narathar\". The music was composed by Bharathwaj, while lyrics were written by Gangai Amaran, Kalaikumar and Snehan. Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu gave the film a mixed review, noting that \"Certain scenes are too contrived - the aim is humour but they only tend to irritate\", while adding \"the screenplay is fast-paced, the dialogue is crisp, it is the story that lags behind\". Reviewer Balaji Balasubramaniam also gave the film a negative review, remarking that \"Vasu has lost his touch and run out of ideas in comedies\". Another critic noted \"A full-length comedy, the narration is fast-paced, the script crisp, and it manages to hold one's attention for the most part.\" The film's story later inspired Sajid Khan's 2007 Hindi comedy film \"Heyy Babyy\" which featured Akshay Kumar and Vidya Balan.",
"Puthu Paatu Puthu Paatu is a 1990 Indian Tamil film, directed by Panju Arunachalam and produced by Ilaiyaraaja. The film stars Ramarajan, Vaidegi, Suma and Rajeev in lead roles. The film had musical score by Ilaiyaraaja. The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.",
"Pavalakkodi (2003 film) Pavalakodi is a 2003 Tamil language drama film directed by Ram - CP Saravanan. The film stars Vijayasarathy, Robert, Paval, Anumohan, Nirosha and Shaama. The film had musical score by Sirpy and was released on 20 March 2003. This movie didn't do well in the box office. The plot of the movie is copied from the 1998 English movie \"There's Something About Mary\". The film score and the soundtrack were composed by Sirpy.",
"Vellayani Paramu Vellayani Paramu is a 1979 Indian Malayalam-language period drama film directed by J. Sasikumar, written by Pappanamkodu Lakshmanan, and produced by E. K. Thyagarajan. It is based on the life of Vellayani Paramu, an outlaw active in the Central Travancore region known for stealing from rich and giving to poor. The film stars Prem Nazir, Jayan, Jayabharathi and Adoor Bhasi. The film has musical score by G. Devarajan. The film was released on 23 February 1979. The music was composed by G. Devarajan and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.",
"Irattimadhuram Irattimadhuram is a 1982 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Sreekumaran Thampi. The film stars Prem Nazir, Krishnachandran, K. R. Vijaya and Master Rajakumaran Thampi in the lead roles. The film has musical score by Shyam. The music was composed by Shyam and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.",
"Thin Thin Thin Thin is a Burmese name that may refer to the following notable people:"
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[
"The Thin Man Goes Home"
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Who is the spouse of the performer of song Mono I Agapi?
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Aggeliki Iliadi Aggeliki Iliadi (, ); born on 16 September 1977), is a popular Greek woman folk singer. Born in Athens, Attica, she began dating entrepreneur Babis Lazaridis in 2004, while he was still married. On June 3, 2005, she gave birth to their son, Babis Jr. They were together until his death, in December 2008. From 2013 to 2018, Iliadi was in a relationship with the football player Savvas Gentsoglou and on July 8, 2014, their son Vasilis was born. Iliadi is the granddaughter of Kaiti Grey, one of the most popular singers of Greece in the 1950s and 60s.
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[
"Taiska Taiska or Hannele Aulikki Kauppinen, née Suominen (born June 9, 1955 in Imatra) is a Finnish singer of popular music. She is mostly known for her evergreen hit, \"Mombasa\" (1975), originally by Italian composer Fabio Frizzi. She married Pekka Kauppinen in 1984, bore him a son named Elias, and divorced in 1990. In the World Popular Song Festival 1977, in Tokyo, Japan, she represented Finland with a Finnish-language song (\"Boogie-mies\"), with a score of 56 points.",
"Ana Kokić Ana Kokić (; born 11 March 1983), is a Serbian singer-songwriter, television personality and actress. She rose to prominence as a member of the less-known group called Energija, with whom she released three albums. Kokić eventually pursued a solo career with her debut album \"Mojna mala\" in 2009, followed by her sophomore album \"Šta če meni ime...\" (2007), which was sold in 200,000 copies. In 2011, she made a comeback with her third release \"Psiho\", which featured a duet with Romanian artist Costi Ioniță, titled \"Idemo na sve\". She additionally received wide attention for winning the first series of Serbian television show \"Tvoje lice zvuči poznato\" in December of 2013. Kokić also starred as singer Silvana Armenulić in the movie \"Bićemo prvaci sveta\" (2015) and made her theatre debut in the comedy play \"Čekajući ministra\" in 2017. Between 2008 and 2019 she was married to Serbian water polo player Nikola Rađen, with whom she has two daughters.",
"Milan Amatya Milan Newar (मिलन नेवार) is a popular singer from Nepal. She has been singing since childhood and is able to sing in multiple languages, including Nepali, Hindi, and Assamese. She is currently located in the UK for a music program. In 2014, after six years marriage, she divorced her husband Mason Amatya as he was not supportive of her career. In 2016, Amatya lost over 13 kg and debuted her new figure in a music video which was widely praised by Nepali media outlets. She has written and produced songs for movies and DVDs. Many of her songs have featured her personal pain and family life. Milan has also participated in a notable Nepali environmental awareness song named Melancholy, which featured 365 Nepali singers and musicians. She recorded her solo parts on 19 May 2016 at Radio Nepal studio in Kathmandu. She set the Guinness World Records for \"Most Vocal Solos in a Song Recording.\", The song was written, composed and directed by environmentalist Nipesh DHAKA.",
"Ena Lepto \"Ena Lepto\" (Greek: Ένα Λεπτό; ) is an uptempo ballad by Greek-Swedish singer Helena Paparizou and is the second single of the new album Ti Ora Tha Vgoume?. The song is written by singer-songwriter Giorgos Papadopoulos and Akis Petrou and produced by Leonidas Tzitzos. Ena Lepto was released via EMI Greece's YouTube channel on 19 April 2013. Paparizou performed the song at MadWalk 2013.",
"Anna Vissi (1981 album) Anna Vissi is the name of a self-titled album by Greek singer Anna Vissi. It is the first album with lifelong collaborator and companion Nikos Karvelas, who is credited under the alias \"Nikos Leonardos\". It was released in Greece and Cyprus in 1981 by EMI Greece. The album includes both original songs as well as several Greek covers of international hits. The album reached gold status. The album was repackaged with the same cover in 1982 to include the bonus song \"Mono I Agapi\", which was the Cypriot entry for the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest sung by Vissi. The album appeared on compact disc for the first time in 2006 with the Minos EMI remastered edition named \"4\", since it was her fourth album. The re-release was prompted, once again, by Vissi's participation in Eurovision, this time for her entry in the 2006 Eurovision Song Contest. Previously the hit singles and other tracks of the album were available in CD format only via various compilations by Minos EMI. The 1982 Eurovision entry \"Mono I Agapi\" was also made available on CD in the CD single \"Autostop/Mono I Agapi\" released in February 2006. All songs from the album were included in 2007 Anna Vissi box set \"Back to Time (Complete EMI Years)\" which charted on the Greek Albums Chart. Composition is by Nikos Leonardos (Nikos Karvelas), Anna Vissi, and Afoi Tzavara. Lyrics are by Giannis Parios, Nikos Leonardos, and Anna Vissi. Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.",
"Anna Karabessini Anna Karabessini (; 12 June 1923 – 7 September 2018), was a Greek singer-songwriter of traditional and folk music. Born in Antimachia, Kos, from her early age her talent in singing appeared as her parents engaged in music and singing. Together with her sister Efi Sarris, they sang traditional songs for many years and are considered \"having a prominent position and well known among all those who served the musical tradition of Kos and the Dodecanese\" She moved to Athens in 1947 with her sister Eftyhia. In 1949 he met and married Charalambos Karabessin and lived together for 35 years until 1984 when he died. In Athens in the early 1950s, her meeting with Simon Karas was decisive for Anna's later artistic career. In 1952 she returns to Kos for business trips to Athens for recordings songs. Anna, accompanied by her sister Eustachia, recorded 23 recordings. Anna and Eftychia, apart from the albums, took part in many TV shows as well as in programs of Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation. She performed in United States, Canada and Australia.",
"Helena Paparizou Helena Paparizou (; , ; born 31 January 1982) is a Swedish-born Greek singer, songwriter and television personality. Born and raised in Sweden to Greek parents, she enrolled in various arts schools before launching a career in Sweden in 1999 as a member of the laïko (Greek folk music) and Eurodance duo Antique, who participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 and afterwards became popular. Antique disbanded in 2003, and Paparizou signed a solo recording contract with Sony Music, releasing the chart-topping debut single \"Anapandites Kliseis\" and album \"Protereotita\" (2004), with emphasis on laïko, pop, and dance sounds, but at first had modest sales. In 2005, she represented Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest with the song \"My Number One\", which she won. It was the first Greek win in the contest's history and transformed her career. Her album was subsequently certified double platinum by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry of Greece. Paparizou attempted a career beyond Greece with English-language material, charting in a few countries abroad. Her three subsequent albums \"Iparhi Logos\" (2006), \"The Game of Love\" (2006) and \"Vrisko To Logo Na Zo\" (2008) all peaked at number one in Greece and reached platinum sales. Her fifth studio album \"Giro Apo T' Oneiro\" (2010) was also certified platinum. Paparizou's final release before she left Sony Music, \"Greatest Hits & More\", was released in 2011 and included \"Baby It's Over\", her biggest hit until 2016. Her biggest hit to date is \"An Me Dis Na Kleo\" ballad song feat Anastasios Rammos released in 2017 exceeding 30 million views on YouTube. Paparizou established herself as a teen idol, particularly among young girls. She has endorsed the brands Nokia and Ivi. For the period 2013-2015, she advertised hair colour products for Koleston company in Greece. In the 2010s she tried to move into television as a judge on \"Dancing on Ice\" (2011) and as a contestant on \"Let's Dance\" (2012). Since 2016 until 2021, Paparizou had been a judge at \"The Voice of Greece\".",
"Mono Esi Mono Esi (Greek: \"Μόνο Εσύ\"; ) is the debut album by Greek musician Giannis Ploutarhos, released in 1999 by Minos EMI in Greece and Cyprus. The songs \"Enas Theos\", \"O,ti Ki An Mou Les\", and \"Mipos Ertheis\" were previously released on the artist's self-titled debut EP. \"Enas Theos\" \"Mono Esi\"",
"Ana Bekuta Nada Polić (; born 6 September 1959), better known as Ana Bekuta (Ана Бекута), is a Serbian singer. She debuted in 1985 with her first album, she has a career spanning over three decades. Since 2011, Bekuta has held her annual concerts in Belgrade's Sava Centar. In 2014, she became a judge and mentor on the televised singing competition \"Zvezde Granda\". She has been in a relationship with the Serbian politician Milutin Mrkonjić from 2012 until his death in 2021.",
"Proti Agapi Proti Agapi (; English: \"First Love\") is the debut studio album by popular Greek singer Nikos Oikonomopoulos, released on 15 November 2007 by Sony BMG Greece. The songs \"Ola Gia Sena\", Koita Na Mathaineis\" and \"Den Eisai Entaxei\" were the most popular."
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[
"Nikos Karvelas"
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Are Qaleh Shira and Deh Par located in the same country?
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Deh Par Deh Par () is a village in Chamsangar Rural District, Papi District, Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 45, in 7 families.
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"Deh Qaleh Deh Qaleh (, also Romanized as Deh Qal’eh and Deh-e Qal‘eh) is a village in Irandegan Rural District, Irandegan District, Khash County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 225, in 58 families.",
"Shib Deh Shib Deh (, also Romanized as Shīb Deh) is a village in Saghder Rural District, Jebalbarez District, Jiroft County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 27, in 8 families.",
"Deh-e Qazi-ye Do Deh-e Qazi-ye Do (, also Romanized as Deh-e Qāẕī-ye Do; also known as Deh-e Kāfī and Deh-e Qāẕī) is a village in Madvarat Rural District, in the Central District of Shahr-e Babak County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2016 census, its population was 25, in 10 families.",
"Qaleh-ye Shir Khan Qaleh-ye Shir Khan (, also Romanized as Qal‘eh-ye Shīr Khān and Qal‘eh Shīr Khān) is a village in Qareh Chay Rural District, in the Central District of Saveh County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 438, in 85 families.",
"Deh-e Shir Khan Deh-e Shir Khan (, also Romanized as Deh-e Shīr Khān and Deh Shīr Khān) is a village in Javersiyan Rural District, Qareh Chay District, Khondab County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,034, in 284 families.",
"Deh Sir Deh Sir (, also Romanized as Deh Sīr; also known as Deh-e Shīr and Deh Zīr) is a village in Qilab Rural District, Alvar-e Garmsiri District, Andimeshk County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23, in 4 families.",
"Deh-e Shur Deh-e Shur or Deh Shur () may refer to:",
"Deh-e Shib, Kuhbanan Deh-e Shib (, also Romanized as Deh-e Shīb and Dehshīb) is a village in Khorramdasht Rural District, in the Central District of Kuhbanan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 17, in 4 families.",
"Darreh Par Darreh Par (, also known as Darreh Bar) is a village in Masabi Rural District, in the Central District of Sarayan County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 54, in 22 families.",
"Pay Par Pay Par (, also Romanized as Pāy Par) is a village in Kohurestan Rural District, in the Central District of Khamir County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 45, in 8 families."
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[
"yes"
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When is the performer of song Clean, Clean 's birthday?
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Clean (Soccer Mommy album) Clean is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Soccer Mommy. It was released on March 3, 2018 through Fat Possum Records. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from music critics, "Clean" received an average score of 78, indicating "generally favorable reviews". All tracks are written by Sophie Allison.
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"Cleaner (band) Cleaner is the name of a German project specializing in electronic music. Formerly known as Cleen, Myer released several albums on the American industrial music record label, Metropolis Records, as well as the labels Zoth Ommog and Accession Records. Cleen began as a side project of Haujobb's Daniel Myer, who teamed up with vocalist Thorsten Meier for the first few releases, beginning with 1997's \"Designed Memories\". After the release of their second album, Thorsten Meier left to pursue other interests, and Daniel Myer assumed all musical and vocal duties. For the third release, \"Solaris\", Myer changed the name of Cleen to Cleaner. Cleen, Cleaner, and Clear Vision have often been described as more synthpop oriented than Haujobb. At this time, all of the Cleen and Cleaner releases are out of print. Daniel Myer continues to record with Haujobb and his numerous other projects, including the recently formed Clear Vision, which appears to be another linguistic twist in the Cleen / Cleaner family.",
"Mama (Clean Bandit song) \"Mama\" is a song by British electronic music group Clean Bandit featuring British singer Ellie Goulding, released as the sixth and final single from Clean Bandit's second album, \"What Is Love?\", on 22 February 2019. Clean Bandit also released the video on YouTube on 25 February 2019, after postponing its launch several times due to technical problems. The video stars a character who resembles Donald Trump, mocking his childhood to his adulthood when he is elected president. The band did not say whether the character is actually Trump but said they wrote a script about \"a boy whose power was taken away from him as a child and he grew up determined to take that power back.\"",
"Dust Clears \"Dust Clears\" is a song by British electronic group Clean Bandit, featuring chorus vocals by Noonie Bao and mainly sung by band member Jack Patterson. The song was released on 19 July 2013 as the third single from their debut album, \"New Eyes\". The song peaked at number 43 on the UK Singles Chart and number 14 on the UK Dance Chart. A music video to accompany the release of \"Dust Clears\" was first released onto YouTube on 19 June 2013 at a total length of four minutes and fifty seconds. Talking about the video Clean Bandit said \"We created and filmed the video ourselves completely and had an amazing time shooting it on a frozen lake in Sweden (Lake Vattern). Two of Jack's friends from film school who helped us make the Mozart's House video came to Sweden to help with this one too: Anna Patarakina and Daria Novitskaya. Big thank you to them and Nick Martin, the skater featured in the video.\" The video was filmed, directed and produced by Clean Bandit. The video contains a reference to the painting by Henry Raeburn of \"The Skating Minister\", portrayed by Nick Martin who dressed in the same clothes and copied the exact pose as in the painting at one point in the video. Nick Martin is an artist and teacher who lives on the Isle of Wight. He also appears in another Clean Bandit video (\"Rather Be\"). The band and Nick came up with the concept of the \"skating Minister\" together.",
"God Save The Clean God Save The Clean is a New Zealand tribute compilation album featuring artist who are under the record label Flying Nun Records amongst others performing songs by New Zealand rock band The Clean. The album was released in 1997.",
"Clean (Severed Heads album) Clean is the second full-length studio album by the experimental Australian group Severed Heads, released in 1981 through Dogfood Productions and Terse Tapes, two labels that the band themselves operated. Originally released on vinyl and cassette formats, both of which contained unique artwork and were released in small quantities, the vinyl in particular only being released as an edition of 400. Ellard reissued it on CD-R in 2005 on his own Sevcom label, with the order shuffled, the song \"Food City\" removed, and bonus tracks. In 2020, the album was reissued on LP by Dark Entries in its original form, with a second LP featuring 14 bonus songs, five of which had never been released before, culled from live performances, the \"Side 3\" cassette and a \"Clean\" demo tape that only resurfaced in 2019. It was also made available digitally on Bandcamp. 2020 Dark Entries reissue 2nd LP",
"So Fresh, So Clean \"So Fresh, So Clean\" is a song by American hip hop duo Outkast from their fourth studio album, \"Stankonia\" (2000), featuring uncredited vocals from singer-songwriter Sleepy Brown. It was produced by longtime collaborators Organized Noize. The song reached number 30 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart and was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in October 2020. Among the things and people mentioned in the song are the Chevrolet Monte Carlo and Cadillac Eldorado (both General Motors cars), the television show \"Showtime at the Apollo\" and its longtime host Kiki Shepard, and R&B singers Teddy Pendergrass and Freddie Jackson. The song prominently features a sample from Joe Simon's \"Before the Night Is Over\". The song also features a sample from Funkadelic's I'll Stay. \"So Fresh, So Clean\" debuted at number 71 on the US \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart dated March 3, 2001. The song eventually reached it peak at number 30 on the chart dated May 5, 2001. On October 8, 2020, the single was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for combined sales and streaming equivalent units of over a million units in the United States. The music video features the duo and Sleepy Brown performing on a variety of CGI backgrounds, a beauty parlor, and a church. Ludacris, Slimm Calhoun, Chilli of TLC and members of Goodie Mob make cameo appearances in the video. The official remix, \"So Fresh, So Clean (Stankonia Remix)\" features Snoop Dogg and Sleepy Brown. It appeared on the soundtrack of Snoop Dogg's movie \"Bones\" under the name \"Fresh and Clean (Remix)\". US CD single US 12-inch single UK CD single UK 12-inch single UK cassette single European CD single Australian CD single In 2017, the song appeared in the first episode of Marvel's \"Iron Fist\". Also in 2017, it appeared on the soundtrack for the video game NBA 2K18.",
"Baby (Clean Bandit song) \"Baby\" is a song by British electronic music group Clean Bandit featuring Welsh singer Marina and Puerto Rican singer Luis Fonsi, released as the fifth single from Clean Bandit's second album, \"What Is Love?\", on 2 November 2018. \"Baby\" is Marina's first single where she is not credited as Marina and the Diamonds, a stage name she had used on prior releases. It is included on her fourth studio album, \"Love + Fear\". A version without Fonsi appears on the album's vinyl release. Baby is composed in the key of C minor. Lyrically, the song deals with a love triangle, with the singer telling somebody that they are \"already someone else's\". The song has a tempo of 117 beats per minute, and has a time signature of common time. It also features a complete descending circle of fifths, which propels the music forward throughout the circle of fifths and back to C minor. On 29 October 2018, the group announced the release on Twitter and shared its cover art. On 2 November 2018, the group performed on BBC Two's \"\". Mike Wass of Idolator called the preview of the song a \"sultry banger that already sounds like a hit\", saying Marina \"coos\" the line \"But I'm already someone else's baby\" over Clean Bandit's \"seductive, Latin-tinged house beats\". \"Billboard\" labelled \"Baby\" a \"flamenco-infused track\", opining that Fonsi's verse in Spanish provides it with a \"distinctive Latin flare\". Clean Bandit also released the video on YouTube on 2 November 2018. The video features Fonsi, Marina, Grace Chatto, and Australian singer Starley. Chatto portrays an unnamed bride who marries Fonsi's character as it is revealed via flashbacks that she had a thwarted relationship with another woman — now a wedding guest — while attending summer camp.",
"Come Clean (Jeru the Damaja song) \"Come Clean\" is a 1993 song by Jeru the Damaja from his 1994 debut album \"The Sun Rises in the East\". The song appeared in many compilation albums. The song was featured prominently in the film Morris From America, and season 3, episode 6 of Narcos.",
"Unknown Country Unknown Country is an album by New Zealand group The Clean, released in 1996. \"CMJ\" wrote that \"it's incredibly easy to be struck by how peculiar this record is, and easier still to forget that The Clean has been doing inventive, experimental, and, well, \"strange\" things in its music all along.\"",
"Good Clean Fun (The Monkees song) \"Good Clean Fun\" is a song by The Monkees from their 1969 album \"The Monkees Present\". Recorded on June 1, 1968, it was released on Colgems single #5005 on September 6, 1969. Written and sung by Michael Nesmith, the song's title is never heard in the lyrics. At the time of release, The Monkees were a trio consisting of Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Davy Jones, Peter Tork having departed in December 1968. \"Good Clean Fun\" reached No. 82 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 29 on the Easy Listening chart. The flip-side, \"Mommy and Daddy\", is sung by its writer Micky Dolenz."
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[
"11 November 1953"
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Who is Eudoxia Epiphania's uncle?
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Eudoxia Epiphania Eudoxia Epiphania () (also known as Epiphania, Eudocia or Eudokia) was the only daughter of the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius and his first wife Eudokia. She was born at Constantinople on the July 7, 611 CE, baptized on August 15, and crowned (in the oratory of St. Stephen in the palace) October 4 of the same year. When she was about 15 years old, her father allied with the Western Göktürks and the Khazars against the Sassanian Persians and the Eurasian Avars. To secure the assistance of the Turks, Eudoxia was promised in marriage to either the Turkic ruler Ziebel (probably Tong Yabghu) or his son. She was afterwards sent to her Turkic husband, but the news of his death stopped her journey, and prevented the consummation of the marriage.
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[
"Empress Eudocia Empress Eudocia, Eudoxia or Eudokia can refer to:",
"Eutropia (sister of Constantine I) Eutropia (died 350) was the daughter of Roman emperor Constantius Chlorus and Flavia Maximiana Theodora, and therefore half-sister of Constantine the Great. She was mother of the short-lived imperial pretender Nepotianus, and was probably killed alongside him by the rival usurper Magnentius in 350. She was married to Virius Nepotianus, who had been consul in 336, and was a favourite of Constantine the Great. She was murdered in 350 by Magnentius, alongside her son Nepotianus. Her murder was mentioned by Athanasius of Alexandria in his \"Apologia ad Constantium\", written to Emperor Constantius II, among others who were killed by Magnentius:...butchering those who so kindly entertained me at Rome; for instance, your departed Aunt Eutropia, whose disposition answered to her name. The source also indicates that she was an acquaintance of Athanasius who met her when he previously stayed at Rome.",
"Eudoxia Eudoxia (, \"Eudoxía\"), Eudokia (, \"Eudokía\", anglicized as Eudocia) or Evdokia is a feminine given name, which originally meant \"good fame or judgement\" or \"she whose fame or judgement is good\" in Greek. The Slavic forms of the name are East Slavic: Evdokiya (), Yevdokiya (); South Slavic: Evdokija (Евдокија), Jevdokija (Јевдокија). It was mainly popular in late antiquity and during the Middle Ages, particularly in Eastern Europe. It continues to be in use today, usually in honor of various saints. Eudoxia became the basis for the name Avdotia, which is a popular name for women in Russia. The names Eudoxia, Eudokia, and Eudocia are interchangeable in most cases for the Wikipedia search engine. Evdokia, one variant of the Greek name, can stand for: Eudoxus and Eudoxius are male versions of the name.",
"Eudokia Ingerina Eudokia (or Eudocia) Ingerina () (c. 840 – c. 882) was a Byzantine Empress as the wife of the Byzantine emperor Basil I, the mistress of his predecessor Michael III, and the mother of Leo VI the Wise, Alexander and Stephen I of Constantinople. Eudokia was the daughter of Inger, who was probably a Varangian, while her mother was a member of a prominent Greek family, the Martinakoi, who claimed imperial ancestry, or according to a later alternative reconstruction by Christian Settipani, her connection to the Martinakoi came through her father, whom he identifies as a Byzantine noble, Inger Martinakios, \"logothete\". Because her family was iconoclastic, the Empress Mother Theodora strongly disapproved of them. Around 855, Eudokia became the mistress of Theodora's son, Michael III, who thus incurred the anger of his mother and the powerful minister Theoktistos. Unable to risk a major scandal by leaving his wife, Michael married Eudokia to his friend Basil but continued his relationship with her. Basil was compensated with the emperor's sister Thekla as his own mistress. Eudokia gave birth to a son, Leo, in September 866 and another, Stephen, in November 867. They were officially Basil's children, but this paternity was questioned, apparently even by Basil himself. The strange promotion of Basil to co-emperor in May 866 lends support to the great probability that at least Leo was actually Michael III's illegitimate son. The parentage of Eudokia's younger children is not a subject of dispute, as Michael III was murdered in September 867. A decade into Basil's reign, Eudokia became involved with another man, whom the emperor ordered to be tonsured as monk. In 882, she selected Theophano as wife for her son Leo, and died shortly afterwards. Eudokia and Basil officially had six children:",
"Eudokia (wife of Justinian II) Eudokia (Late Greek: Εὐδοκία) was the first Empress consort of Byzantine Emperor Justinian II. The name and place of burial of Eudokia in the Church of the Holy Apostles was recorded in \"De Ceremoniis\" by Constantine VII. However little else is known of her. She is presumed to have been married to Justinian II during his first reign (685–695) and to have either predeceased him or divorced him by the time of his second marriage to Theodora of Khazaria in 703. A daughter of Justinian is reported by the chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor and the \"Chronographikon syntomon\" of Ecumenical Patriarch Nikephoros I of Constantinople to have been betrothed to Tervel of Bulgaria between 704 and 705. Her name is presumed to have been \"Anastasia\", after her paternal grandmother, Anastasia. She is the only known child attributed to Eudokia. Modern genealogists have theorised Eudokia and Justinian II may have descendants among later Bulgarian and Byzantine royalty and nobility. The theories rely on the successful marriage of her daughter \"Anastasia\" to Tervel of Bulgaria; however, the Byzantine chroniclers give us only fragmentary knowledge of the Bulgarian royal lineages of her time and no clear description of the relations the Bulgarian monarchs had to each other. Thus there is little evidence to support them beyond the theoretical level.",
"Eudoxia Laskarina Eudoxia Laskarina Asanina (, Nicaea, 1245/1248 – Zaragoza, 1309 or 1311), sometimes known as Laskara, was a member of the Byzantine Laskaris family. In later life, she fled to Aragon, where she was known as Irene Lascaris. Eudoxia was the fourth daughter of the Nicaean emperor Theodore II Laskaris and of Elena Asenina of Bulgaria. Eudoxia grew up as a princess at the court of Nicaea, where Constance II of Hohenstaufen, widow of her grandfather John III Doukas Vatatzes, also lived. As a young girl, Eudoxia was promised to the royal family of Aragon as a bride for their son, the future king Peter III of Aragon (\"claim not substantiated\"). After the Palaiologan usurpation of the imperial throne, both ladies (dowager empress Constance and Eudokia) fled, travelling the same route from Constantinople to Tende and Sicily, respectively, and, years later, both sought protection at the kingdom of Aragon under king James I. Soon after the re-conquest of Constantinople in 1261, Michael VIII Palaiologos, until then regent and co-emperor for the infant John IV Laskaris, had himself declared sole emperor, solidifying his position by having John IV blinded and imprisoned. John's three sisters, Eudoxia among them, were hurriedly married off to foreigners, so their descendants could not claim to the imperial succession. The young Eudoxia was married in Constantinople on 28 July 1261 to Count Guglielmo Pietro I of Ventimiglia and Tenda (1230–1283), count of Ventimiglia and Tende, a Ligurian region then at the service of Genoa, allies with Michael VIII. This marriage originated the house Lascaris de Vintimille, which stood until the 19th century as a powerful French family. Eudoxia and Pietro had seven children: Before reaching 30, Eudoxia fled from Liguria to Aragon (ca. 1278) with her daughters Beatrice and Vatatza. Some say it was at the time of her husband's death or on being refused by him.",
"Eudokia Baïana Eudokia Baïana (Greek: Εὐδοκία Βαϊανή; died 12 April 901) was a Byzantine Empress consort as the third wife of Leo VI the Wise. The work \"Theophanes Continuatus\" was a continuation of the chronicle of Theophanes the Confessor by other writers, active during the reign of Constantine VII. The work records the few details known about her. According to Theophanes, Eudokia came from the Opsician Theme. The Opsician Theme was originally composed of all of Bithynia and Paphlagonia, stretching from Abydos on the Dardanelles to Sinope on the Black Sea and inland to Ancyra. In the 20th century, the lands once belonging to the Theme form most of the northwestern quarter of Asiatic Turkey. In Spring, 900, Leo VI married Eudokia. His previous two wives had predeceased him. \"De Ceremoniis\" by Constantine VII names as many as three daughters born of the previous marriages but no son. Leo wanted to secure his succession by this marriage. George Alexandrovič Ostrogorsky points that a third marriage was technically illegal under Byzantine law and against the practices of the Eastern Orthodox Church at the time. Leo VI had to seek permission by Ecumenical Patriarch Antony II of Constantinople. A year later Eudokia died while giving birth. Theophanes considers the son stillborn and unnamed. However \"De Ceremoniis\" while listing the children of Leo VI names a son called Basil, which might indicate her son survived long enough to be named. \"De Ceremoniis\" gives her burial place as the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople.",
" Euarchus is also the father of Pyrocles and uncle of Musidorus, but has no idea what they have been up to. Philanax persuades the reluctant Eurarchus to aid Arcadia by assuming authority for the present and becoming the state's \"protector.\" The book concludes with a lengthy trial scene. Gynecia, \"Palladius\" and \"Timopyrus\" are brought forth to stand before Euarchus, who presides as judge, and Philanax, who argues on behalf of the apparently murdered Basilius. Gynecia's trial goes quickly because she, overcome by grief, wants to die as quickly as possible, and gives a false confession of intentionally poisoning her husband and sovereign. Euarchus sentences her to death by being entombed alive with Basilius. \"Timopyrus\" is tried next, and Philanax delivers a vituperative oratory condemning him for cross-dressing, for raping Philoclea, and for conspiring with Gynecia to murder Basilius; \"Timopyrus\" is acquitted of the murder charges, but is sentenced to death for raping Philoclea. \"Palladius\" is likewise condemned to death for attempted theft of the royal daughter, Pamela. As the convicts are escorted to their executions, a friendly compatriot of Musidorus suddenly arrives with important information. He has heard about the trial, guessed the princes' true identities, and feels Euarchus should know that he has condemned his own son and nephew to death (for various reasons, the identities of Euarchus and the princes has been hitherto obscured). At this moment of recognition, or anagnorisis, Euarchus is devastated, but decides that justice trumps kinship, and with a heavy heart confirms their death sentence. Suddenly, groans are heard from Basilius's corpse and, to the surprise and delight of all, Basilius emerges from a deep coma. All are forgiven, the princes marry the princesses, and the book thus ends with a comic reversal, or peripeteia, from justice and death to reconciliation and marriage. Sidney's manuscripts of the \"Old Arcadia\" were not published until the 20th century. The \"New Arcadia\", however, was published in two different editions during the 16th century, and enjoyed great popularity for more than a hundred years afterwards.",
" In 1067, Constantine X was dying. Eudokia, as empress-dowager and mother of Constantine's under-age sons, would lead the regency, but Constantine X feared that she might well include her relatives, who already held high posts in court, in the regency, thus posing a potential threat to the succession of Constantine X's own children. He therefore had Eudokia swear publicly that she would not remarry nor appoint any co-regents over her under-age sons with Constantine other than the latter's brother John Doukas, an oath that she would soon break, however, with her marriage to Romanos IV Diogenes. Constantine Keroularios died sometime under Nikephoros III Botaneiates (ruled 1078–1081), as his will was the subject of an investigation at this time. According to genealogy of the 12th-century writer John Tzetzes, Constantine Keroularios married a Georgian lady, a relative of the empress Maria of Alania. The couple had a daughter, who was eventually adopted by Eudokia Makrembolitissa. She married a tax official named George, and gave birth to Tzetzes' own mother. Constantine had also several sons, of whom Michael Keroularios was the most prominent: he likewise became \"megas droungarios tes viglas\" and married into the Komnenos dynasty, but defrauded his other brothers of their father's inheritance.",
" He had two children with Fabia (Eudoxia Epiphania and Emperor Constantine III) and at least nine with Martina, most of whom were sickly children. Of Martina's children at least two were disabled, which was seen as punishment for the illegality of the marriage: Fabius (Flavius) had a paralyzed neck and Theodosios was a deaf-mute. The latter married Nike, daughter of the Persian general Shahrbaraz, or daughter of Niketas, cousin of Heraclius. Two of Heraclius's children would become Emperor: Heraclius Constantine (Constantine III), his son from Eudokia, for four months in 641, and Martina's son Constantine Heraclius (Heraklonas), in 638–641. Heraclius had at least one illegitimate son, John Athalarichos, who conspired against Heraclius with his cousin, the magister Theodorus, and the Armenian noble David Saharuni. When Heraclius discovered the plot, he had Athalarichos's nose and hands cut off, and he was exiled to Prinkipo, one of the Princes' Islands. Theodorus had the same treatment but was sent to Gaudomelete (possibly modern-day Gozo Island) with additional instructions to cut off one leg. During the last years of Heraclius's life, it became evident that a struggle was taking place between Heraclius Constantine and Martina, who was trying to position her son Heraklonas to assume the throne. When Heraclius died, he devised the empire to both Heraclius Constantine and Heraklonas to rule jointly with Martina as Empress."
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"Theodore"
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Where was the place of death of the director of film The Devil And Miss Jones?
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F. Richard Jones Frank Richard Jones (September 7, 1893 – December 14, 1930) was an American director, screenwriter, and producer. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Dick Jones was sixteen years old when he became involved in the fledgling film industry in his hometown with the Atlas film company. A technician, Jones worked in the film laboratory and other departments but his real interest lay behind the camera, creating the visual product. With the industry's shift to Hollywood, in 1915 he joined Mack Sennett at his Keystone Studios where he put together a few scripts and was given the opportunity to direct. Initially his directorial work was difficult but he dedicated himself to learning the job. Jones first came to prominence when Mabel Normand promoted him to co-direct the troubled feature "Mickey" (released 1918). The film was a major success and Normand always credited Jones with having rescued the project. He gained a solid reputation among his peers after directing Mabel Normand in "Molly O'" (1921). Unfortunately, the film came out after the murder of William Desmond Taylor and many movie-goers boycotted the film because of the negative publicity surrounding Normand's involvement in the matter. While at Keystone, Dick Jones met and married Irene Lentz, a young actress who would go on to become one of Hollywood's leading costume designers. In 1923 Dick Jones began producing films but after directing and/or producing forty-five films for Keystone, including feature-length productions, in 1925 he was lured away from Hal Roach Studios. Although he directed films for Roach, Dick Jones worked mainly as an executive coordinator, serving as a production supervisor and a supervising director. In 1926, Jones was responsible for signing Mabel Normand to a contract with Roach Studios after health and drug addiction problems had kept the star actress out of films for three years. He would direct or produce Normand in all five of her films made at Roach Studios until her permanent retirement in 1927. As well, during his time with Roach, Jones worked on nineteen different film projects with Stan Laurel. In later years, Laurel would state that it was Dick Jones who taught him everything about comedy filmmaking. Leaving Roach Studios at the end of 1927, Jones directed Douglas Fairbanks in the highly acclaimed adventure epic "The Gaucho".
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"David Jones (director) David Hugh Jones (19 February 1934 – 19 September 2008) was an English stage, television and film director. Jones was born in Poole, Dorset, the son of John David Jones and his wife Gwendolen Agnes Langworthy (Ricketts), and was educated at Taunton School and Christ's College, Cambridge. Originally a television director, he first worked for BBC producer Huw Wheldon working on the \"Monitor\" arts television series from 1958 to 1964. His first London stage production was a triple-bill of T.S. Eliot's \"Sweeney Agonistes\", W.B. Yeats's \"Purgatory\" and Samuel Beckett's \"Krapp's Last Tape\" at the Mermaid Theatre in 1961. He directed his first production for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Arts Theatre in 1962, Boris Vian's \"The Empire Builder\", and two years later accepted the administrative post Artistic Controller at the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), helping to plan programmes of new plays and European classics at the Aldwych Theatre in London. He also took over responsibility for running the Aldwych from 1969 to 1972, and again in 1975–77. During this period he championed the plays of David Mercer and Maxim Gorky. For BBC television he directed \"Ice Age\", \"The Beaux Stratagem\" and \"Langrishe, Go Down\" (1978). He also produced \"Play of the Month\" (1977–79). He left the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1979, taking up an appointment as an artistic director at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and to found a resident theatre company modelled on the RSC (Beauman 344). After teaching at the Yale School of Drama in 1981, he returned to England, where for the BBC Television Shakespeare series he directed \"The Merry Wives of Windsor\" (1982), and \"Pericles, Prince of Tyre\" (1984), and made his debut as a feature film director with \"Betrayal\" (1983), based on Harold Pinter's screenplay adaptation of his 1978 play \"Betrayal\".",
"Jacquie Jones Jacquie Jones (April 28, 1965 – January 28, 2018) was an American public television film director, producer, writer and media executive. She was an editor of the Black Film Review from 1989 to 1993. She was executive director of Black Public Media (formerly the National Black Programming Consortium) from 2005 to 2014. Jones founded the New Media Institute in 2006 and the Public Media Corps in 2009. She was the recipient of two Peabody Awards, a Gracie Award and was selected as a Revson Fellow at Columbia University. Jones lived in Durban, South Africa. She was visiting Washington, D.C., with her family in December 2017 when she became ill. Jones died January 28, 2018. Jacqueline Michele Jones was born April 28, 1965 in Washington D.C. Her parents were Humphrey and Claire Antoine Jones. Her family later moved to Memphis, Tennessee. Jones attended Howard University, majoring in English and minoring in African American Studies. She obtained her BA in English in 1987. Jones was editor of the Black Film Review from 1989 until 1993. She later attended Stanford University, earning a MA in documentary filmmaking in 1995. Jones' was hired as a producer for Public Broadcasting Station, WGBH, in Boston after her graduation from Stanford University. In 1999 she was hired as senior vice president of ROJA productions. She worked at ROJA until 2003. While working for ROJA, Jones was responsible for creating new installations for the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee. From 2005 to 2014, Jones served as executive director of the National Black Programming Consortium (now called Black Public Media). This nonprofit organization's primary focus is to develop media content about the Black experience. \"As executive director of the media arts organization, Jones expanded the focus of the nonprofit from public television to include digital media and she founded the New Media Institute that went on to train more than 500 media professionals in the tools needed to navigate the digital world.\". Jones founded the New Media Institute in 2006. She also established Public Media Corps in 2009, \"which connected minority and low-income communities with broadband public media resources and social media tools.",
"The Girl and Death The Girl and Death () is a 2012 Dutch film directed by Jos Stelling. The Girl and Death is a love story of Nicolai and Elise (a courtesan). Their love is obstructed by materialism, wealth, and death. The film, based on an original script by Jos Stelling and Bert Rijkelijkhuizen, tells the story of the Russian physician Nicolai, who returns to an old hotel, the place where he first met his great love half a century ago and relives his romantic tragedy. A large part of the film is set in the late nineteenth century, and the action takes place in an abandoned hotel/sanatorium in Tannenfeld, Thuringia where most of the film was also shot. The hotel still bears the traces of past glory. Eventually, it becomes clear why Nicolai has really returned.",
"John Joseph Jones (writer) John Joseph Jones (3 February 1930– August 2000) was a British and Australian poet, folk singer, musician, playwright, and theatre director. Born in London in 1930, Jones first arrived in Australia in 1948. Between 1950 and 1952, he worked briefly in England, Canada, and Fiji, but settled permanently in Australia in 1952. He graduated from University of Western Australia with a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Anthropology and English (1959). He lived in Parkerville and developed and sustained the Parkerville Amphitheatre during his lifetime. The amphitheatre became the site for a number of 1970s concerts, including John Farnham, Cold Chisel, and Jo Jo Zep and the Falcons. A documentary on the Parkerville Amphitheatre, \"Sets, Bugs & Rock n Roll\", by Tempest Productions, was shown at the Revelation Film Festival in Perth in July 2015.",
"Pirkle Jones Pirkle Jones (January 2, 1914 – March 15, 2009) was a documentary photographer born in Shreveport, Louisiana. His first experience with photography was when he bought a Kodak Brownie at the age of seventeen. In the 1930s, his photographs were featured in pictorialist salons and publications. He served four years in the army during World War II in the 37th division and went to the Fiji Islands, New Georgia, Guadalcanal, and the Philippines. After the war, Jones entered the first class in photography offered by the California School of Fine Arts. There he met the artists and instructors that helped him develop his talents: Ansel Adams, Minor White, Edward Weston, and Dorothea Lange. Jones worked as Ansel Adams' assistant for 6 years, and the two photographers forged a lifelong friendship. Dorothea Lange came to him in 1956 with an idea to collaborate on a photographic essay entitled \"Death of a Valley\". The essay chronicled the death of the town of Monticello, California in the Berryessa Valley, which disappeared when the Monticello Dam was completed. The photographs were taken in the last year of its existence. Jones later described the project with Lange as \"one of the most meaningful photographic experiences of [his] life\". Jones also took part in numerous collaborations with his wife, Ruth-Marion Baruch, over the course of their 49-year marriage. In 1968, Ruth-Marion introduced herself to Kathleen Cleaver, wife of famous Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver, and spoke of her interest in the Black Panthers and their portrayal by the media. It was her desire to present a balanced view that inspired Jones and Ruth-Marion to photograph the Panthers from July to October 1968 in the San Francisco Bay Area. Jones was the recipient of an honorary doctorate from the San Francisco Art Institute, where he taught until 1994.",
"Scott R. Dunlap Scott R. Dunlap (June 20, 1892 – March 30, 1970) was an American film producer, director, screenwriter, and actor. Dunlap was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1892 and entered the film business in 1915. He produced 70 films between 1937 and 1960, and directed 47 films between 1919 and 1929. In 1942, Dunlap was with Western star Buck Jones at the Cocoanut Grove fire in Boston, Massachusetts. Dunlap was hosting a party in Jones's honor at the nightclub. Jones died two days after the fire, while Dunlap was seriously hurt, but survived. Dunlap died in Los Angeles in 1970.",
"Edward Cronjager filmography Edward Cronjager (March 21, 1904 – June 15, 1960) was an American cinematographer. His film career began in 1925, with \"Womanhandled\", and ended in 1961 with \"The Devil's Partner\", although he died over a year prior to the film's opening in Atlanta. Within this 35-year career, Cronjager was the director of photography on 117 feature films (listed here), as well as many short films. On every film he was the cinematographer, or a co-cinematographer.",
"Reginald Denham Reginald Denham (10 January 1894 – 4 February 1983) was an English writer, theatre and film director, actor and film producer. Reginald H. F. Denham was born in London, England, in 1894. He spent a good part of his career directing Broadway theatre, with a career spanning from the melodrama \"Rope's End\" (1929) by Patrick Hamilton, to the courtroom drama \"Hostile Witness\" (1966). In 1930 he produced the First World War drama \"Suspense\" in the West End. He was married to Irish actress Moyna Macgill (1919–1924), English actress Lilian Oldland, and American actress and writer Mary Orr (from 1947 until his death). While they were married, Denham and Orr were writing partners. His daughter with Macgill, Isolde Denham, married actor Peter Ustinov when they were both 19. He died following a stroke in Englewood, New Jersey.",
"Kenneth V. Jones Kenneth Victor Jones (14 May 1924 – 2 December 2020) was a British film score composer. Born in Bletchley, Buckinghamshire, Jones was a scholar at King's School, Canterbury. This was followed by a 6-month RAF-sponsored course in music and philosophy at Queen's College, Oxford and, after the war, 3 years at the Royal College of Music from 1947 (of which he was later made a professor in 1958). He was a composer, founder and original conductor of The Wimbledon Symphony Orchestra and acted as one of the Governors of Rokeby School, helping to raise the £50,000 that was needed to save it from closure in 1966. He died in December 2020 at the age of 96.",
"Mr Jones (2019 film) Mr Jones (; ) is a 2019 biographical thriller film directed by Agnieszka Holland. It was selected to compete for the Golden Bear at the 69th Berlin International Film Festival. The film loosely tells the story of Gareth Jones, a journalist from Wales, who in 1933 travels to the Soviet Union and uncovers the truth about the Holodomor, the devastating famine in Ukraine in which millions died. In 1933, Gareth Jones is an ambitious young journalist who has gained some renown for his interview with Adolf Hitler. Thanks to his connections to Lloyd George, the former British prime minister, he is able to get official permission to travel to the Soviet Union. Jones intends to try to interview Stalin and to find out more about the Soviet Union's economic expansion and its apparently-successful five-year development plan. Jones is restricted to Moscow but jumps his train and travels unofficially to Ukraine to discover evidence of the Holodomor, including empty villages, starving people, cannibalism and the enforced collection of grain. On his return to Britain, he struggles to get his story taken seriously. The film ends by recording that Jones died while reporting in Inner Mongolia with a guide who was secretly connected the Soviet secret service. The film had its world premiere at the 2019 Berlin International Film Festival. Distribution rights for North America were acquired by Samuel Goldwyn Films in August 2019, and was released in the United Kingdom on 7 February 2020. It was scheduled to be released in the United States on 3 April 2020. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of based on reviews, with an average rating of . The website's critics consensus reads: \"Flawed yet fundamentally worthy, \"Mr. Jones\" peers into the past to tell a fact-based story that remains troublingly relevant today.\" On Metacritic, the film has a score of 68 out of 100 based on reviews from 19 critics, indicating \"generally favourable reviews\". Kevin Maher of \"The Times\" gave the film two out of five, calling it a \"bungled biopic of Stalin whistle-blower\". Peter Bradshaw of \"The Guardian\" gave the film four out of five, calling it \"a bold and heartfelt movie with a real Lean-ian sweep\"."
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"Hollywood"
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Who is the spouse of the director of film La Presidenta Municipal?
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La presidenta municipal La presidenta municipal ("The Municipal President") is a 1975 Mexican comedy film directed by Fernando Cortés and starring María Elena Velasco, Adalberto Martínez "Resortes", and Pancho Córdova. The film was shot at Tlayacapan, Morelos, Mexico. In the small town of Chipitongo el Alto (in English: High Chipitongo), the political boss Don Mario N. Cruz is the only presidential candidate of that municipality. When the town's clumsy and blind pressman Don Casimiro Buenavista prints "María" instead of "Mario" on all the ballots, the presidential candidacy automatically reverts to María Nicolasa Cruz, an illiterate and indigenous potter. Once informed, María Nicolasa accepts her new job as municipal president of Chipitongo el Alto only to rebuke the town's corrupt secretaries. Mario Nicanor Cruz, the former candidate, plans several schemes along with Lawyer Topillo in order to get rid of María.
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"First Lady of Tijuana First Lady of Tijuana is the honorary title of the spouse of the municipal president of Tijuana. This title is not official, but its use is more common and widespread in the media. Spouses of municipal presidents officially bear the title of President of the Municipal DIF Sponsorship. The current first lady is Alicia Llanos de Ramos.",
"Óscar Puente Óscar Puente Santiago (born 15 November 1968) is a Spanish politician and advocate. Óscar Puente is a member of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party. He is the current Mayor of Valladolid since 2015. He was the President of the Socialist Group at the City Council of Valladolid, in office from 11 July 2008 to 13 June 2015. He is the current spokesman of the federal executive of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party since 2017. He was elected secretary general of the local socialist group and in 2010, the municipal and provincial executives supported him as a candidate for mayor of Valladolid in 2009. He is the also current councilor of the Valladolid city from 16 June 2007. He has been a lawyer since 1995. Óscar Puente was born in Valladolid, Spain on 15 November 1968. Óscar Puente is married to Laura Soria Velascoand and has two daughters. He graduated in Law from the University of Valladolid and has a course in political management in 1993.",
"Angélica Rivera Angélica Rivera Hurtado (; born 2 August 1969) is a Mexican singer, model and telenovela actress who, as the wife of Former President Enrique Peña Nieto, was the First Lady of Mexico from 2012 to 2018. Rivera's work as an actress has included \" Alcanzar una estrella II \" (1991), \" La Dueña \"(1995), \"Ángela\" (1998), \"Sin Pecado Concebido\" (2001), \"Mariana de la Noche\" (2003) and \"Tequila De Maguey\" (2007), as well as the soap opera \"Destilando Amor\" (2007), responsible for her current nickname \"\"La Gaviota\"\" (English: The Seagull). As a singer she was a member of the short-lived fictional teen group Muñecos de Papel. Rivera was born in the neighborhood of Azcapotzalco, Mexico City and has five sisters and a brother. When actress Verónica Castro was filming near where Rivera lived as a young woman, Castro and Rivera met and Castro suggested her to compete in \"The Face of the Herald\", a contest Rivera won in 1987. Rivera’s career began at the age of 17, when she won The Face of the Herald contest. She was a model in the video \"Ahora Te Puedes Marchar\" with Luis Miguel. She then filmed two TV and radio commercials, one for the United States and one for Japan, followed by the TNT video program hosted by Martha Aguayo. In 1989, Rivera received the opportunity to play a small part in the soap opera \"Dulce Desafío\". This part was followed by many others on shows such as \"Simplemente Maria\", \"Mi Pequeña Soledad\" and \"La Picara Soñadora\". In 1991 Rivera was selected to play the scheming and opportunistic Silvana in \"Alcanzar una estrella II\". In 1995, Rivera was chosen to give life to Regina Villarreal in La Dueña; alongside Francisco Gattorno. In 2003 she played a villain Marcia in the soap opera \"Mariana de la Noche\", produced by Salvador Mejía.",
"Florence Jaugey Florence Jaugey (born 22 June 1959) is a French movie director, actress, producer, and screenwriter who lives in Nicaragua. In 1989 Jaugey co-founded with her partner and Nicaraguan filmmaker Frank Pineda, Camila Films (Nicaragua), an independent film production company based in Managua. In 1998, her film \"Cinema Alcázar\", won the Silver Bear award at the Berlin International Film Festival Berlinale. Florence Jaugey was born in Nice, France in 1959 and studied drama in Paris at the ENSATT \"(École Nationale Supérieure des Arts et Techniques du Théâtre)\". She worked as an actress during the 1980s. In 1984 she traveled to Nicaragua to be the lead actress in the movie \"El Señor Presidente\" directed by the Cuban director Manuel Octavio Gómez. In 1989, together with Frank Pineda a Nicaraguan filmmaker and her partner, they set up in Managua, Camila Films Production Company, an independent film company, directing and producing several short and documentary films, and one feature film \"La Yuma\" (2010). A second feature film titled \"Naked Screen\" (2014), original title in Spanish \"La Pantalla Desnuda\". Jaugey's filmmaking has focused on the poverty-stricken people of Nicaragua, such as her short film \"Cinema Alcázar\", winner of the Silver Bear at Berlinale (1998) the first one for Nicaragua. This documentary is about the people that live in the ruins of an earthquake destroyed movie house from the 1950s located in the center of Managua. The documentary \"The Island of the Lost Children\" (2001), original title in Spanish \"La Isla de los Niños Perdidos\", filmed in jail and winner of the \"Society of Authors Award\" at the International Documentary Festival \"Cinéma du Réel\" in Paris in 2002. One of her last works, a documentary titled \"Deceit\" (2012), original title in Spanish \"El engaño\", portrays the lives of seven women who survived human trafficking and how they struggle to cope with their experiences leading some of them to work for at-risk centers for girls. In the documentary Jaugey travels through Central America exposing the conditions of violence against women. In 2009 Jaugey directed a drama, her first feature film, titled \"La Yuma\".",
"Luciana Pedraza Luciana Pedraza () (born January 5, 1972) is an Argentine actress and director. She is married to American actor Robert Duvall, and is the granddaughter of Argentine aviation pioneer Susana Ferrari Billinghurst. Born in the Argentine Northwest, in the city of Salta, she grew up in the province of Jujuy. She is the oldest of five sisters. After graduating from the University of Buenos Aires with an MBA and minor in English she became the marketing director of W. & Associates. In 1996, while strolling down a street, she approached actor Robert Duvall to invite him to a party without knowing who he was. They share the same birthday 41 years apart. Pedraza wrote and directed the short documentary \"The Portrait of Billy Joe\" (2004) and appeared in the 2002 film \"Assassination Tango\", which was written, produced, directed by, and starring her future husband Robert Duvall. She also appeared in another film of his, \"Wild Horses\". Luciana and Robert Duvall founded The Robert Duvall Children's Fund in 2001 to help impoverished children and families of Northern Argentina. Since then, the non-profit organization has expanded its reach to assist children and families around the world by partnering with reputable organizations. Among their organizations is Pro Mujer, a non-profit dedicated to helping Latin America's poorest women help themselves through micro-credit, business training and health care links.",
"First Lady of Uruguay First Lady of Uruguay (Spanish: \"Primera Dama de Uruguay\") is the unofficial and protocol title of the wife of the President of Uruguay, and hostess of Suarez Residence. The first lady is not an elected position, carries no official duties and brings no salary, but is traditionally responsible for directing and coordinating activities in the social field of the presidency and also accompany the president in ceremonies or official activities. The current first lady is Lorena Ponce de León, wife of Luis Lacalle Pou, who took office on 1 March 2020.",
"Claudia von Alemann Claudia von Alemann (born 23 March 1943 in Seebach, Thuringia) is a German filmmaker. Claudia von Alemann is the daughter of German military officer Hans von Alemann Heine and his wife Ludmilla. She majored in sociology and art history at the Berlin Free University. After graduation, she attended the Ulm School of Design at the Institute for filmmaking. She is married to Cuban director Fernando Pérez and they have a daughter.",
"Patricia Marroquín Hilda Patricia Marroquín Argueta de Morales (born 25 July 1970) is a Guatemalan public figure and the former First Lady of Guatemala since January 2016. She is the wife of former President Jimmy Morales. Born Hilda Patricia Marroquín Argueta, she studied at the Colegio Comercial Guatemalteco and the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. She married comedian Jimmy Morales in 1989. The couple have three children. In 2014, she worked in the Ministry of Health and Public Assistance. Marroquín became First Lady of Guatemala in January 2016. She has focused on healthcare and social issues, as well as projects focused on children and adolescents. She has maintained a moderate figure and does not make frequent public appearances. She accompanied President Morales to several state visits: Israel, she met with Nechama Rivlin and Sara Netanyahu; France, met with French President Emmanuel Macron and Brigitte Macron. She was the first wife of a Latin American head of state to arrive at the Elysee Palace during the presidency of Emmanuel Macron and the United States, with President Morales attending a banquet hosted by President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump.",
"Lorena Castillo Lorena Castillo García de Varela (born July 31, 1968) is a Panamanian journalist and politician. She has served as the First Lady of Panama since July 1, 2014, to July 1, 2019, during the tenure of her husband, President Juan Carlos Varela. Castillo was born on July 31, 1968, in Panama City to parents, Manuel J. Castillo and Moty Garcia. She married Juan Carlos Varela in 1992. Castillo attended the Flint Hill School in Oakton, Virginia in the United States. She received her bachelor's degree in journalism from the Latin American University of Science and Technology (ULACIT). She worked as a journalist at several organizations, including Telemetro. In 2012, she left journalism to focus on her husband's political career. Lorena Castillo became First Lady of Panama on 1 July 2014. On November 16, 2015, Castillo was appointed a \"Special Advocate for AIDS in Latin America\" by UNAIDS executive director Michel Sidibé during a ceremony at the Palacio de las Garzas.",
"María del Carmen Carrasco María del Carmen Carrasco y Llorente was a Guatemalan woman, wife of the Head of Government Enrique Peralta Azurdia. She served as First Lady of Guatemala during the term of her husband, was known to be one of the first wives of a president to have received a special pension after the death of her husband."
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"Mapy Cortés"
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What is the place of birth of the composer of film Vengo (Film)?
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Vengo (film) Vengo is a 2000 Spanish-French-German-Japanese film by Tony Gatlif. A musical drama about two Andalusia gypsy families locked in an age-old struggle for power. The film features a performance by Spanish flamenco singer Maria del Carmen Salazar ("La Caita"). The story centres around a blood feud among Spanish Gypsies, with Caco (played by Antonio Canales) as the main character who must fight for his family's honor and safety. "Vengo" was selected as closing film at the 57th Venice International Film Festival in 2000.
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"Živko Čingo Živko Čingo (also spelt Zhivko Chingo) (13 August 1935 – 11 August 1987) Macedonian writer, born in Velgosti, near Ohrid, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He studied literature at the University of Sts Cyril and Methodius in Skopje. He worked as a journalist and as Director of the Macedonian National Theatre. He was part of the new wave of writers to emerge on the Macedonian literary scene in the post-World War II period. One of his novels, \"Golemata Voda\" (\"The Great Water\"), has been translated into English. It was also recently made into a movie, also called \"The Great Water\". Some other short stories have also been translated and published in various collections.",
"Alejandro Viñao Alejandro Viñao (born 4 September 1951) is an Argentinian composer currently living in the United Kingdom. Viñao studied musical composition in Buenos Aires with the composer Jacobo Ficher. In 1976 he was awarded a British Council scholarship to study in London at the Royal College of Music and later on at the City University where he was awarded a PhD in composition. He has been a British citizen since 1994, holding double nationality. During the 1980s he worked at IRCAM in Paris where he developed a particular interest in sound interpolation (sound morphing) a technique that has featured in many of his compositions such as Chant D'Ailleurs which won the Prix Ars Electronica in 1992. Viñao has written orchestral and chamber music for the concert hall, opera and music-theatre, film scores, music for multimedia events and rock and popular music. He has also created and presented programmes for the BBC, radio 3. He has written a number of percussion works, such as Khan Variations for solo Marimba, which have become very well known in the US, Europe and Japan. At the rhythmic level Viñao's work has been influenced by non-western musical traditions as well as by the music of Conlon Nancarrow. In percussion pieces such as Estudios de Fronteras (2004), Viñao used complex polyrhythms to realise with percussion instruments played by human performers ideas derived from Nancarrow's etudes for pianola. He also explored complex ideas on multi temporality using acoustic instruments combined with electroacoustic means, most noticeably in his string quartet Phrase & Fiction (1994/1995). Viñao presented his views on Nancarrow and his influence on a generation of composer such as himself in a BBC radio programme entitled 'Children of Nancarrow'. Later work by Viñao's focused on social and political issues, writing music-theatre or concert pieces concerned with themes such as the invasion of Iraq (\"The Baghdad Monologue\", 2005), the fate of deprived children around the world (\"Chicos del 21\", 2010) and the financial crisis of 2008 (\"Greed\", 2012). Viñao lives in Crouch End, North London with his wife, actress Lachele Carl, and their son Matteo.",
"Richard LaSalle Richard LaSalle (January 18, 1918 – April 5, 2015) was an American film score composer. LaSalle was born in Louisville, Colorado. He began as a performer for local hotels as a pianist and orchestra leader between the 1940s and 1950s. In 1958 he joined the American Society of Composers and Publishers in which started his main career in film composing.",
"Sergio Guerrero (composer) Sergio Guerrero (1921–2008) was a Mexican composer of film scores.",
"Michael Montes Michael Montes is a Peruvian-American composer for films, album projects and all other media. Michael Montes was born in Houston, Texas, the son of American nurse Anne Pryor and Peruvian doctor Mario Montes who came to the United States in the early fifties. The family eventually settled in Eden, NY. He began piano studies at age seven, quit in frustration with his teacher's methods, returned feverishly on his own at age thirteen and later dropped out of medical school in order to pursue composition as his life's work. As a child his first film music experience occurred while watching the Jules Verne classic \"Mysterious Island\". Years later he discovered that Bernard Herrmann had composed the score. Later on Pink Floyd became an influence, specifically their innovative production techniques and use of hallucinatory textures. While studying at Bard College he joined the chamber choir that specialized in the works of Renaissance composer Josquin des Prez. After school he steeped himself in the worlds of Brian Eno, tape loops and musique concrète while working with modern dance troupe Floorplay. Moving to New York City he began an extended period of composing in every possible genre for thousands of television commercials while collecting multiple Clio and AICP awards. Several of his pieces are included in the permanent collection of New York's Museum of Modern Art. He was brought in to work with Aimee Mann's band 'Til Tuesday as keyboardist for their studio album \"Everything's Different Now\" and subsequent tour. He created the Zoar project, a series of dark atmospheric albums. The debut album, \"Cassandra\", was released on the Philip Glass label Point Music. He began a collaboration with noted filmmaker Bill Morrison scoring his films \"Ghost Trip\", \"Trinity\" and \"Her Violet Kiss\" He conceived and produced cellist Erik Friedlander's breakthrough solo album \"Maldoror\". Allan Kozinn of The New York Times called his \"String Quartet No. 2\" \"an experiment in intensity...a forceful wave of sound.\" Subsequently he has composed scores for numerous films including Joan Stein's Oscar® nominated \"One Day Crossing\", Alexander Olch's \"The Windmill Movie\", Michael Tully's \"Don't Leave Home\" and Sophia Takal's \"Always Shine\". He has been the composer of choice for The TED Conference, The Nobel Prize Summit, The World Science Festival and The AICP Show. His TedTalks opening title music has enjoyed billions of views.",
"Manuel De Sica Manuel De Sica (24 February 1949 – 5 December 2014) was an Italian composer. Born in Rome, the son of Vittorio De Sica and María Mercader, De Sica enrolled at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, in which he studied with Bruno Maderna. He debuted as a composer for his father's film \"A Place for Lovers\" (1968). In 1993, De Sica won the Nastro d'Argento for Best Score for Carlo Verdone's \"Al lupo, al lupo\". In 1996 he won the David di Donatello for Best Score for Carlo Lizzani's \"Celluloide\". In 2005 he was honored with the title of Commendatore of the Italian Republic. De Sica died of a heart attack on 5 December 2014 at the age of 65, in Rome.",
"José Nieto (composer) José Nieto (born March 1, 1942) is a Spanish composer, orchestrator, songwriter, conductor and drum player. He is best known for writing films scores, such as Mad Love (2001), El bosque animado (1987), The Fencing Master (1992), (2003), The Turkish Passion (1994) or (2000). For television he has composed music for the BBC in series like Crusades(1995) or From the Heart of the World (1990), and other international and Spanish series such as Captain James Cook (1988), Armada (1988), Teresa de Jesús (1984) or Los jinetes del alba. He has collaborated in theater with Miguel Narros in \"El burlador de Sevilla\" and \"Salomé\", with María Ruiz in the \"Serrana de la Vera\" and \"The portrait of Dorian Gray\", with José Luis Gómez in \"Bodas que fueron famosas del Pingajo y la Fandanga\" and in \"Life is a Dream\", with Adolfo Marsillach in \"Los locos de Valencia\" and with Josefina Molina in \"No se ser ...\", among others. He also has worked in the field of ballet. Her works in this field include \"Tres Danzas Españolas\", \"Ritmos\", \"Romance de Luna\", \"Don Juan Tenorio\", \"Dualia\" and \"El Corazón de Piedra Verde\", all composed for the National Ballet of Spain. For the Andalusian Dance Company he has composed \"Picasso: Landscapes\" and, on behalf of the Seville Flamenco Biennial of 2012, \"Blood Spell\", based on Macbeth by Shakespeare. Nieto has won 3 times the Film Writers Circle Awards, 6 times the Goya Awards for the best music from the Academia of Sciences and Cinematographic Arts, and the Golden Spike at the 41st Valladolid International Film Week. He is the first composer to obtain the National Prize for Cinematography in Spain (2000). In 2001 he received the award from the Academy of Arts and Sciences of Music for the best soundtrack album of the movie Mad Love (Original Title: \"Juana La Loca\") and for Carmen in 2003. That same year he also received the Max Theater Award for the music of \"El burlador de Sevilla\".",
"Louis Siciliano Louis Siciliano (born in Naples, Italy - March 19, 1975) is a Jazz and World-Music composer, piano and synth performer, sound engineer and music producer. Siciliano produced, composed, orchestrated, conducted and mixed soundtracks for feature film productions, TV commercials, TV movies, theater shows, musicals and opera. His music production as recording artist encompasses styles including modern jazz, electronic music, contemporary symphonic music, opera, post rock, traditional Latin music, Celtic and classical Indian music. On 12 May 2013, he started a new artistic life with the name ::ALUEI::.",
"Mihály Víg Mihály Víg (born 1957, Budapest) is a Hungarian composer, poet, songwriter, guitarist, singer and actor. Born into a family of musicians. He is the co-founder of bands Trabant (1980–1986) and Balaton (1979–present). Although the bands' songs were not officially released in the 1980s, they became underground hits. He composed film scores for the films of János Xantus, András Szirtes, Ildikó Szabó, Péter Müller Sziámi and Béla Tarr. He also plays the lead role - Irimiás - in the film \"Sátántangó\". His score for the film \"The Turin Horse\" was nominated for \"the European Film Prize for Best Composer in 2011\". He also appears in the cast of Gábor Fabricius' film Eltörölni Frankot. In 1986, at the invitation of Tamás Pajor, he and his wife became members of the Faith Church. After a short time he left the religious community in disappointment, but the memory of this bitter encounter stayed with him for the rest of his life, and for a long time caused him a creative crisis. In 2020, he made serious accusations in László Bartus's book, \"Fesz lesz\", against the congregation and personally against Sándor Németh, the leading pastor of the congregation, in connection with the loss of his wife and son. \"Versek és novellák\" (versek, dalszövegek, novellák, forgatókönyvek, színdarabok; Bahia Music Kiadó, Budapest, 1996",
"Virgilio Ranzato Virgilio Ranzato (May 7, 1882 in Venice – April 20, 1937 in Como) was an Italian composer and violinist. Virgilio Ranzato began his career firstly as violin player on the Conservatory in Venezia and Milan. Later he studied musical composition as well. Than he worked mostly as chamber music player or conductor. From around 1910 he worked mostly as a composer, and besides others he wrote an opera \"Campane di guerra\" (1933, Milan), and several operettas. Ranzato served as concertmaster for the LaScala Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini. He made several recordings on the Pathe label."
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"Algiers"
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When did the director of film Laughing At Danger die?
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Laughing at Danger Laughing at Danger is a 1940 American crime film directed by Howard Bretherton and written by George Waggner and John W. Krafft. The film stars Frankie Darro, Joy Hodges, George F. Houston, Mantan Moreland, Kay Sutton and Guy Usher. The film was released on August 12, 1940, by Monogram Pictures.
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"Lance Comfort Lance Comfort (11 August 1908 – 25 August 1966) was an English film director and producer born in Harrow, Middlesex. In a career spanning over 25 years he became one of the most prolific film directors in Britain, though he never gained critical attention and remained on the fringes of the film industry, creating mostly B movies. Comfort carried on working almost right up to his death in Worthing, Sussex, 1966. He had four children: Edward, born in 1929, James, born in 1931, Anna, born in 1934 and Jack, born in 1936. The film historians Steve Chibnall and Brian McFarlane praise Comfort's gifts \"in the confident exercise of melodramatic impulses in the interests of illuminating character and relationship, in a decorative visual style to serve these impulses, and in giving their heads to string of dominant actors\". They add that all of his films \"are persuasive narratives, marked by absence of sentimentality and the whiff of human reality\".",
"To the Public Danger To the Public Danger is a 1948 British drama short film directed by Terence Fisher and produced by John Croydon. It stars Dermot Walsh, Susan Shaw, Barry Letts, and Frederick Piper. The film was made at Highbury Studios as a second feature for release by the Rank Organisation. Like other Highbury productions, it offered acting opportunities for several of Rank's young contract stars. The film's sets were designed by Don Russell, although a number of the scenes were shot on location. The screenplay, written by T.J. Morrison and Arthur Reid, was based on a 1939 radio play by Patrick Hamilton, who had been encouraged to write the story as part of a government road safety campaign. Hamilton had himself been knocked down by a drunk driver. The story was updated slightly, and represents the post-war malaise with the use of noirish sequences. After making the film Fisher graduated to directing several more expensive productions for Gainsborough Pictures. While having a quiet drink together in a road house, a young working-class couple Fred and Nancy fall into the company of two raffish motorists including the self-confident Captain Cole. After a game of billiards and a number of drinks, they drive out on the road. While spreeding along in the dark they hit what they think to be a man on a bicycle. Although Fred wants to stop, Captain Cole insists on driving on. Nancy takes Cole's side and begins taunting Fred, who eventually manages to escape and raise the alarm. A police investigation reveals that nobody had been injured in the collision with the bike, which had belonged to a poacher who didn't report the accident. In the meantime, Cole, Nancy and the other passenger have suffered a crash of their own while drunken speeding, killing all three of them.",
"Everett Riskin Everett Riskin (1895-1982) was an American film producer, best known for his work at Columbia and MGM, where he specialised in comedies. He was the brother of screenwriter Robert Riskin.",
"Laughing at Trouble Laughing at Trouble is a 1936 American comedy film directed by Frank R. Strayer and written by Robert Ellis and Helen Logan. The film stars Jane Darwell, Brook Byron, Allan Lane, Sara Haden, Lois Wilson, and Margaret Hamilton. The film was released on December 11, 1936, by 20th Century Fox.",
"When Danger Smiles When Danger Smiles is a 1922 American silent Western film directed by William Duncan and starring Duncan, Edith Johnson and James Farley.",
"Danger (TV series) Danger is a CBS television dramatic anthology series that began on September 26, 1950, and ended on May 31, 1955. The show featured many actors including Leslie Nielsen, E.G. Marshall, Joseph Anthony, Edward Binns, John Cassavetes, Míriam Colón, Ben Gazzara, Grace Kelly, Richard Kiley, Walter Slezak, Hildy Parks, James Gregory, Paul Langton, Cloris Leachman, Jayne Meadows, Martin Ritt, Maria Riva, Lee Grant, Kim Stanley, Rod Steiger, Steve Allen, Anne Bancroft, Jacqueline Susann, Walter Matthau, and Leo Penn. Yul Brynner was one of the directors of \"Danger\". Tony Mottola composed the show's theme and background music for episodes. Richard Stark was the announcer. Amm-i-dent sponsored the program.",
"Ray Selfe Ray Selfe was an English film director, producer, screenwriter, editor, actor and movie theatre owner. Selfe was born into a working-class family in Croydon, Surrey and the age of ten found a passion for film. Selfe was later expelled from Pitman's College at the age of fourteen and became a projectionist at a local movie theatre and ran a mobile cinema, taking film shows to youth clubs. In 1950, he had a brief national service in the RAF and was later discharged on medical grounds. As a filmmaker, Selfe later went on to work on such films as \"Four Dimensions of Greta\" (1972), \"White Cargo\" (1973), \"Emmanuelle in Soho\" (1981) and \"Don't Open till Christmas\" (1984). During Selfe's later years, he gained respect within the industry as a private film archive curator. Selfe died of a heart attack at age 69.",
"Aleksandr Sery Aleksandr Ivanovich Sery (; 27 October 1927 - 16 October 1987) was a Soviet and Russian film director, known for directing the 1971 comedy film \"Gentlemen of Fortune\". Upon directing \"Gentlemen of Fortune\", Sery had just come out of prison. Georgiy Daneliya assisted him and wrote the script. Sery used his prison experience to design many situations in the movie, and he also introduced numerous expressions from Russian criminal slang (known as \"fenya\"). During filming, it was discovered that he was ill with leukemia, which grew worse and worse during his life. On 16 October 1987, eleven days before his 60th birthday, he committed suicide by a gunshot.",
"Circle of Danger Circle of Danger is a 1951 British thriller film directed by Jacques Tourneur which stars Ray Milland, Patricia Roc, Marius Goring, Hugh Sinclair and Naunton Wayne. An American travels to England to discover the truth behind his brother's death during the Second World War. The screenplay was by Philip MacDonald. In \"The New York Times\" its anonymous reviewer wrote: \"British restraint in acting and dialogue is almost painfully evident throughout the proceedings\". Although Milland's acting is praised for its \"naturalness, a quality which, it might be added, may be due in part to the unadorned and often expert dialogue turned out by Philip MacDonald\", the film despite a decent British supporting cast, \"is still an unexciting and largely placid adventure\". Dennis Schwartz wrote of the film in 2013: \"Though routine, the highly skilled Tourneur does his best to keep it lively, watchable and enjoyable.\"",
"Danger: Diabolik Danger: Diabolik () is a 1968 action and crime film directed and co-written by Mario Bava, based on the Italian comic series \"Diabolik\" by Angela and Luciana Giussani. The film is about a criminal named Diabolik (John Phillip Law), who plans large-scale heists for his girlfriend Eva Kant (Marisa Mell). Diabolik is pursued by Inspector Ginko (Michel Piccoli), who blackmails the gangster Ralph Valmont (Adolfo Celi) into catching Diabolik for him. An adaptation of the comics was originally envisioned by producer Tonino Cervi, who set up an international co-production deal in 1965 and hired Seth Holt to direct the film with a cast that included Jean Sorel, Elsa Martinelli and Gilbert Roland. Appalled with Holt's footage, distributor Dino De Laurentiis assumed control of the film's production, electing to restart the project from scratch with a new screenplay and Bava as director. De Laurentiis produced the film in tandem with another comic book adaptation, \"Barbarella\", with the two projects receiving financial support from Paramount Pictures and sharing several cast and crew members. Catherine Deneuve was initially cast as Eva, but her incompatibility with Law and disagreements with Bava led to the part being recast with Mell. Working under more financial and creative pressure than he was familiar with, Bava delivered \"Danger: Diabolik\" considerably below its assigned budget by utilizing many of the inexpensive visual effects techniques that he had used in his earlier films; it would prove to be the only film that he would direct for a major Hollywood studio. Upon its theatrical release, \"Danger: Diabolik\" performed below De Laurentiis' expectations at the box office, and received negative reviews from \"The New York Times\" and \"Variety\". With the re-evaluation of Bava's filmography, retrospective reception of the film has been more positive, with its visuals, the performances of Law and Mell, and the score by Ennio Morricone receiving praise. In studies of the film, critics and historians have focused on Bava's use of mise-en-scène to replicate the imagery and stylization of comic books, and the film's reflection of the socio-political upheavals of the 1960s in its characterization and narratology."
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"12 April 1969"
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Where was the director of film Twilight Train born?
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Midnight Train (film) Midnight Train (Chinese: 午夜火车) is a 2013 Chinese horror film directed by Jiangnan Zhang. Derek Elley of Film Business Asia gave the film a 5 out of 10.
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"Twilight (1944 film) Twilight (France: Félicie Nanteuil) is a 1944 French drama film directed by Marc Allégret and starring Claude Dauphin, Micheline Presle and Louis Jourdan. Two men are in love with the same woman. The film was shot at the Victorine Studios in Nice during 1942. The movie was popular at the French box office.",
"Steven Spielberg Steven Allan Spielberg (; born December 18, 1946) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. He began his career in the New Hollywood era and is currently the most commercially successful director of all time. Spielberg is the recipient of various accolades, including three Academy Awards (with two for Best Director), a Kennedy Center honor, a Cecil B. DeMille Award, and an AFI Life Achievement Award. Spielberg was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, and grew up in Phoenix, Arizona. He later moved to California and studied film in college. After directing several episodes for television including \"Night Gallery\" and \"Columbo\", he directed the television film \"Duel\" (1971) which gained him acclaim from critics and audiences. He then made his directorial film debut with \"The Sugarland Express\" (1974). The following year he became a household name directing 1975's summer blockbuster \"Jaws\". He then directed box office successes \"Close Encounters of the Third Kind\" (1977), \"E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial\" (1982), and the \"Indiana Jones\" series. Spielberg later explored drama in \"The Color Purple\" (1985) and \"Empire of the Sun\" (1987)\".\" After a brief hiatus, he directed back to back box office successes with the acclaimed science fiction action film \"Jurassic Park\" and the holocaust drama \"Schindler's List\" (both 1993). In 1998, he directed the World War II epic \"Saving Private Ryan,\" which was both a critical and commercial success. Spielberg continued in the 2000s with science fiction, including \"A.I. Artificial Intelligence\" (2001), \"Minority Report\" (2002), and \"War of the Worlds\" (2005). He also directed the children's adventure films \"The Adventures of Tintin\" (2011), and \"Ready Player One\" (2018), as well as the historical dramas \"Amistad\" (1997), \"Munich\" (2005), \"War Horse\" (2011), \"Lincoln\" (2012), \"Bridge of Spies\" (2015), \"The Post\" (2017), and the musical \"West Side Story\" (2021). In addition to filmmaking, he co-founded Amblin Entertainment and DreamWorks, and has served as a producer for many television series and films.",
"Twilight (2007 film) Twilight () is a 2007 Canadian comedy-drama film, directed by Fernand Dansereau. The film stars Monique Mercure as Madeleine, a woman suffering from Alzheimer's disease who travels to the Gaspé region of Quebec where she plans to commit suicide, and Suzanne Clément as Zoé, a troubled younger woman whom she befriends with transformative effects on both of their lives. The film was Dansereau's first narrative fiction film since \"Sweet Lies and Loving Oaths (Doux aveux)\" in 1982, after having concentrated on making documentary films for virtually all of the intervening 25 years. It premiered at the Montreal World Film Festival in August 2007, before going into commercial release in November. The film received three Prix Jutra nominations at the 10th Jutra Awards in 2008, for Best Film, Best Director (Dansereau) and Best Supporting Actress (Clément).",
"Night Train (1998 film) Night Train is a 1998 Irish romantic thriller directed by John Lynch (as his debut feature), starring John Hurt and Brenda Blethyn, released in the United Kingdom on August 28, 1998. Lynch was nominated for a Crystal Star for the film at the Brussels International Film Festival, and Hurt won the Best Actor award at the Verona Love Screens Film Festival for his performance. The film follows Michael Poole (Hurt), an ex-prisoner with a passion for electric trains and the Orient Express. In his attempts at starting a new life, he finds refuge in the house of Mrs. Mooney, a possessive old lady (Pauline Flanagan). Things begin to get complicated when he falls for the lady's daughter (Brenda Blethyn), and he faces the ultimate question of catching the night train or taking charge of his life like an adult. \"Variety\"'s Glenn Lovell wrote that while the film was a \"good-hearted\" mix of romance and reflection, the film \"eventually jumps the tracks, derailed by jarring tone shifts and homestretch absurdities.\"",
"Twilight (2008 film) Twilight is a 2008 American romantic fantasy film based on Stephenie Meyer's 2005 novel of the same name. Directed by Catherine Hardwicke, the film stars Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson. It is the first film in \"The Twilight Saga\" film series. This film focuses on the development of the relationship between Bella Swan (a teenage girl) and Edward Cullen (a vampire), and the subsequent efforts of Edward and his family to keep Bella safe from a coven of evil vampires. The project was in development for approximately three years at Paramount Pictures, during which time a screen adaptation that differed significantly from the novel was written. Summit Entertainment acquired the rights to the novel after three years of the project's stagnant development. Melissa Rosenberg wrote a new adaptation of the novel shortly before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike and sought to be faithful to the novel's storyline. Principal photography took 44 days and was completed on May 2, 2008; the film was primarily shot in Oregon. \"Twilight\" was theatrically released on November 21, 2008; it grossed over US$407 million worldwide, despite receiving mixed reviews from critics. It was released on DVD March 21, 2009 and became the most purchased DVD of the year. The soundtrack was released on November 4, 2008. Following the film's success, \"New Moon\" and \"Eclipse\", the next two novels in the series, were produced as films the following year. Seventeen-year-old Bella Swan, leaves Phoenix, Arizona and moves to Forks, a small town located on Washington state's Olympic Peninsula, to live with her father, Charlie, the town's police chief. Her mother, Renée, is remarried to Phil, a minor league baseball player whose career often keeps them on the road. Bella becomes re-acquainted with Jacob Black, a Native American teen who lives with his father, Billy, on the Quileute Indian Reservation near Forks. She makes friends at her new high school, but finds the mysterious and aloof Cullen siblings particularly intriguing. Bella is seated next to Edward Cullen in biology class on her first day, but he seems repulsed by her. After a week's absence from school, Edward returns and socializes normally with Bella. A few days later, she is nearly struck by a skidding van in the school parking lot.",
"The Girl on the Train (2013 film) The Girl on the Train is a 2013 American independent thriller film directed and written by Larry Brand, and produced by James Carpenter, Rebecca Reynolds, Gary Sales. The film stars Henry Ian Cusick, Nicki Aycox, Stephen Lang. Danny Hart, a documentary filmmaker, boards a train at Grand Central Terminal, heading to upstate New York to interview the subjects of his latest project. A chance encounter with a mysterious young woman leads him on a journey of a very different sort, and within the blink of an eye, Hart is forced to leave his complacent life behind for a world in which the line between fantasy and reality is blurred. As Hart tells his strange story to a police detective he finds himself being questioned as Martin tries to discover whether Hart is the victim or the suspect in the strange affair. \"The Girl on The Train\" is directed and written by Larry Brand, and produced by James Carpenter, Rebecca Reynolds, and Gary Sales. Reynolds and Carpenter, who founded 8180 Films, are married. Ross Satterwhite was the executive producer. \"The Girl on The Train\" was shot in New York City from March to April 2012, over a total of 17 days. Filming locations include offices in the Wall Street area, an abandoned Catholic school, and Grand Central Terminal. \"The Girl on the Train\" premiered at the Newport Film Festival. In November 2013, Monterey Media bought the United States distribution rights to the film, and they released the film in the United States in 2014. \"The Girl on the Train\" was selected to screen at the following film festivals:",
"The Death Train The Death Train (alternately titled Death Train) is a 1978 Australian made-for-television horror thriller film directed by Igor Auzins, and starring Hugh Keays-Byrne and Max Meldrum. It was produced by Robert Bruning's Gemini Productions. A dead man is discovered at the bottom of his garden. It appears he has been hit by a train even though no train has run along those tracks for years. The film was shot in Sydney. Shooting started September 1977. Don Groves of the \"Sydney Morning Herald\" said \"Bruning has made some terrific thrillers, but this isn't one of them. After an intriguing opening, \"The Death Train\" simply runs off the rails... the script is given such tongue-in-cheek treatment, it's little more than a farce.\" Charles Tatum from \"eFilmCritic\" rated the film a negative two out of five stars, criticizing the film's script, and editing. Dave Sindelar from \"Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings\" gave the film a positive review, stating that the film's overall quirkiness (from its bizarre mystery, offbeat characters, and surreal humor) worked in its favor.",
"Aleksandr Medvedkin Aleksandr Ivanovich Medvedkin (; 24 February 1900 – 20 February 1989) was a Soviet Russian film director, best known for his 1935 film \"Happiness\". His life and art are the subject of Chris Marker's documentary films, \"The Train Rolls On\" (1971) and \"The Last Bolshevik\" (1992). He travelled around Russia in his Kinopoezd, a film-train, in which he carried film equipment and shot movies in Kolkhozy, which he would then screen there.",
"Twilight (1940 film) Twilight () is a 1940 German drama film directed by Rudolf van der Noss and starring Viktor Staal, Ruth Hellberg and Carl Raddatz. The film's art direction was by Hermann Asmus and Carl Ludwig Kirmse.",
"The Kingdom of Twilight The Kingdom of Twilight is a 1929 film directed by British author and explorer Alexander MacDonald. Jim Carrington leaves England with his daughter Dorothy after a scandal, and seeks his fortune as a gold prospector in northern Australia. He learns of a mysterious tribe of aborigines but is wounded and captured by the drive. He is given up for dead by everyone except for Dorothy who continues to search for him. She is captured by the tribe as well and discovers her father is alive. They return together to white civilisation where Dorothy is reunited with a young gold miner who loves her. MacDonald had previously made a film called \"The Unsleeping Eye\" (1928) in Papua, which was a commercial success. He reused many cary and crew on this film, including his wife, actor Wendy Osborne. Scenes were shot at an old ming camp in Chillagoe with an aboriginal corroboree staged in the Mungana Caves nearby. Shooting was finished by September 1928. The film was released in England but not Australia, although it did have some screenings in 1932."
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[
"Seoul"
] |
What is the place of birth of the director of film I Shout Love?
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I Shout Love I Shout Love is a 2001 Canadian short film written and directed by Sarah Polley. The film stars Matthew Ferguson and Kristen Thomson as Bobby and Tessa, a couple who are on the verge of breaking up when Tessa convinces Bobby to spend one last night together recording video of them reenacting the better times in their relationship. The film won the Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 23rd Genie Awards in 2003, and Thomson won an ACTRA Award for her performance. The film was screened on CBC Television's "Canadian Reflections" in 2002, and was later distributed on the DVD release of Polley's feature film "Away from Her".
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[
"Something to Shout About (film) Something to Shout About is a 1943 Columbia Pictures musical film directed by Gregory Ratoff. The film stars Don Ameche and Janet Blair, and was nominated for two Academy Awards. The film's sets were designed by the art director Nicolai Remisoff. The film takes place behind the scenes of a fictional vaudeville play. The story centers on a recently divorced woman. She decides to use her alimony settlement to produce her own show. Unfortunately her chief backer insists on starring in it. She is saved by a talented man, who puts everything on risk to replace the talentless chief backer.",
"Prashant Raj Prashant Raj (born 10 March 1982 in Bangalore) is an Indian film director and screenwriter known for his work in Kannada cinema. He made his directorial debut with \"Love Guru\" in 2009. Prashant Raj is an Indian film director who's been entertaining the audience with his movies for a decade now. It was in the year 2009 he made his debut directional movie \"Love Guru\" and set up his benchmark in the Kannada Film Industry. Later Raj continued his direction journey by directing various hit movies like \"Ghana Bhajana\", \"Whistle\", \"Zoom\", \"Dalapathi\", and \"Orange\".",
"Michael James Love Michael James Love (aka Michael Love) is an American screenwriter, producer, and film director. Love has written many screenplays, including \"Mavericks\" for Playtone, for Icon and Universal Studios, and Tina Modotti for Mick Jagger's Jagged Films and Warner Brothers. Love grew up in Mexico City of American parents and attended Cal Arts at Valencia California. Love is also a jazz pianist and has a BA degree in music composition from Cal Arts. In 1987 Love wrote the screenplay for the Academy Award-nominated \"\" directed by Luis Mandoki about Gabriela Brimmer, the Mexican poet with cerebral palsy, starring Liv Ullmann, Robert Loggia, and Norma Aleandro. In 1993, Love wrote the original screenplays for the ABC 'Movie of the Week' \"Shattering the Silence\" and in 1996 the Spanish-language feature film \"Extranos Caminos\". In 2010 Love wrote the screenplay for the Spanish language film \"La Leyenda De Las Arcas\" released in 2011. Love wrote the original screenplay for the historical epic \"Cristiada\", aka \"For Greater Glory\", directed by Dean Wright and produced by NewLand Films about the Cristero War in Mexico (1926–1929), starring Andy García, Peter O'Toole, Bruce Greenwood, Eva Longoria, and Rubén Blades. \"Cristiada\" was released internationally by Relativity Media and Arc Entertainment, and was nominated for five Alma Awards. As a writer, producer, director, Love made three feature films with his ex-wife Tina Love: \"Hold it Like a Baby\" (2009), and the documentaries \"Last Man in Paradise\" (2011) and \"Much Ado About W.\" (2007), all of which had their world premieres at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Love has also made two feature documentaries and several shorts, such as \"The Santa Ynez River Wilderness\" (2012), which premiered at the 2013 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The Santa Ynez River wilderness won the 2013 San Luis Obispo International Film Festival CCF Best Documentary Film Award, and Bringing Back the Wild: Coal Oil Point Natural Reserve. Short natural history films by Love include \"The Snowy Plover and You\" (2016), \"Devereux Slough (2017), Breakthrough (2016), The Western Snowy Plover: Natural History and Recovery\" (2016).",
"Mick Davis (director) Michael Davis (born 1 August 1961) is a Scottish film director, producer and screenwriter. Born in Glasgow and raised in the Gorbals, Davis was bed-ridden with asthma during his childhood. When he outgrew the condition, he worked as a fitness coach for the football team Celtic F.C. where he met and befriended the singer Rod Stewart, an ardent supporter of Celtic. When Davis moved to Los Angeles to begin a career in screenwriting, Stewart introduced him to people in showbusiness to give his career a start. Davis' first major credit was as screenwriter on \"Love in Paris\" (also called \"Another 9½ Weeks\", a sequel to \"9½ Weeks\"). In 1999, he made his directorial debut with \"The Match\", a football-themed romantic comedy filmed in Scotland. In 2004, he directed \"Modigliani\", a biography of the artist Amedeo Modigliani. In 2013, Davis wrote, produced and directed a short film, \"Haunting Charles Manson\", and the next year, a feature-length version of the same film.",
"Antony Hickling Antony Hickling (born 8 November 1975) is an English Independent film maker, actor and writer. He became a French citizen in 2018. Antony Hickling was born in South Africa, Johannesburg the son of an Indian father and English mother. At a young age he returned to the United Kingdom and the family settled in Greater Manchester where he trained as an actor at Manchester University (The Arden School of Theatre). He then moved to Paris, France and left his doctorate unfinished to pursue a career in cinema. He went on to direct films related to his research on Queer. His films have been screened at LGBTQ film festivals worldwide. He continues to work as an actor. Hickling's films are characterized by religious symbolism, metaphor and explicit sexual representations, often blending the boundaries between surrealism and realism. His style intertwines theatrical genres, freely crossing from drama to dance and transcending traditions of individual forms. The work incorporates performance art, poetry and painting. The Trilogy of films : \"Little Gay Boy\", \"Where Horses Go To Die\" and \"Frig\" are of an autobiographical nature and \"Frig\" marks the end of what Hickling has called the first chapter. With his next film \"Down in Paris\" he moves towards a more traditional narrative style and the film illustrates the beginning of a new phase in the directors work.",
"Varda Bar-Kar Varda Bar-Kar is a film director, writer, and producer based in Santa Monica, California. She is best known for her short film \"Window\", her viral video \"What Kind of Planet Are We On?\", her documentary \"Big Voice,\" \"9-1-1 (TV series),\" and her documentary \"Fandango at the Wall\" . Varda was born in London, England to a South African mother and Romanian father. She holds a BA in theater arts from Cornell University and an MFA in film studies from the San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI). She worked as a script supervisor for directors Jim Jarmusch, Wayne Wang and Carroll Ballard. In 2015, Varda's feature documentary, \"Big Voice\", won Best Premiere Documentary at the Heartland Film Festival and the 2018 PBS SoCal broadcast of \"Big Voice\" won a Bronze Telly Award. She is a member of the DGA, Film Fatales and the Alliance of Women Directors.",
"Speak to Me of Love Speak to Me of Love () is a 2002 French drama film written and directed by Sophie Marceau and starring Judith Godrèche, Niels Arestrup, and Anne Le Ny. The first feature-length motion picture directed by actress Sophie Marceau, the film is about the breakup of a long-term relationship. \"Speak to Me of Love\" was filmed on location in New York City and Paris. In 2002, the film received the Montréal World Film Festival Award for Best Director (Sophie Marceau) and was nominated for the Grand Prix des Amériques. Justine and Richard's fifteen-year relationship ends in separation due to irreconcilable differences with Justine maintaining custody of their three boys. Her new life means having to deal with being a single parent but at the same time, she comes to terms with her own parents' divorce and finds a common bond with her long-suffering mother. Richard, a renowned author, deals with the situation by devoting all his attention to his writing. Both are forced to confront their uncertain futures, while examining what led to the breakdown of their marriage.",
"Alexander Singer Alexander Singer (born 18 April 1928, in New York City, New York, died 28 December, 2020) was an American director. He began his career behind the camera in 1951 as a cinematographer on the short documentary \"Day of the Fight\", directed by his high school friend Stanley Kubrick. Singer turned to directing a decade later with the film \"A Cold Wind in August\". Although he directed other films, such as the Lee Van Cleef western \"Captain Apache\" (1971), and \"Glass Houses\" (1972), an adaptation of a book that his wife Judith Singer wrote, the bulk of Singer's credits are in television. The long list of series to which Singer has lent his directorial talents include \"Dr. Kildare\", \"The F.B.I.\", \"\", \"Alias Smith and Jones\", \"Nakia\", \"Police Woman\", \"Cagney & Lacey\", \"MacGyver\", six episodes of \"The Monkees\", and three \"Star Trek\" series: \"\", \"\", and \"\".",
"Ian Ayres (filmmaker) Ian Ayres is an American filmmaker. As a director his films include the feature-length documentary \"The Jill & Tony Curtis Story\" which was selected for screening at the Bel Air Film Festival, the Montreal World Film Festival, and the Mammoth Film Festival. This 2008 documentary is about the efforts of Tony Curtis and his wife to rescue horses from slaughterhouses. He is also the director of \"Tony Curtis: Driven to Stardom\" a documentary which traces the personal and professional history of the actor. As a producer, his credits include \"The Universe of Keith Haring\", a documentary by Christina Clausen about Keith Haring that includes colorful archival footage and interviews with Kenny Scharf and Yoko Ono, gallery owner Tony Shafrazi, and the choreographer Bill T. Jones which was screened at the Tribeca Film Festival, as well as \"\" a documentary released in 2010 that looks at the revolutionary transformation in South Africa through the eyes of five men and women who lived under the shadow of apartheid. He is working on a feature documentary about Marilyn Monroe.",
"Michael Meert Michael Meert (born 1953 in Bonn, Germany) is a German film author and director. He is the grandson of the Flemish politician and writer Leo Meert and the bohemian violinist Stephanie Prinz. From 1976 to 1981 Michael Meert studied at the German Film and Television Academy Berlin (dffb), where he met Andrei Tarkovsky, Joris Ivens and Johan van der Keuken. Later he attended the Masterclass of Edvard Bernstein−Zebrowski and Krzysztof Kieslowski for three years. Along with many others, he founded the “Video-Movement” and worked on a great number of videos within the “grass-roots movement” of video art. After his highly acclaimed feature film “Krieg der Töne” (ZDF, 1988) he worked along the border between documentary and video art and now he devotes his work mainly to TV movies with a highly poetic style for a broader public."
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[
"Toronto"
] |
Who is younger, Dennis Sommers or Ed Hovlik?
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Dennis Sommers Dennis James Sommers (July 12, 1940 – September 14, 2020) was an American professional baseball catcher, manager and coach. A left-handed batter who threw right-handed, Sommers stood tall and weighed . He was born in New London, Wisconsin. Sommers spent the first 18 years of his baseball career as a player and manager in the San Francisco Giants' farm system, peaking for two half seasons (1965–66) with the Tacoma Giants and Phoenix Giants of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League. Later in 1966, he began his managerial career as a midseason replacement for the Lexington Giants of the Class A Western Carolinas League. He handled San Francisco farm teams through 1975, ending as the team's Double-A skipper. His 1975 Lafayette Drillers were co-champions of the Texas League. After spending the 1976 campaign as pilot of the Chicago Cubs' Midland Cubs TL affiliate, Sommers came to Major League Baseball for the first time as first-base coach of the New York Mets in 1977–78, working for Joe Frazier and Joe Torre. When his contract was not renewed for 1979, Sommers moved to the Detroit Tigers' system as manager of the Montgomery Rebels of the Double-A Southern League. Then, in , Sommers returned to MLB as a coach for the Cleveland Indians (1980–85). He later coached for the San Diego Padres (1988–90) and the Giants (1993–94). In between those assignments, he served as a minor league instructor, scout, and front-office official. All told, Sommers coached in Major League Baseball for 13 seasons. As a minor league player, Sommers batted .220 in 2,570 at-bats spread over ten seasons, while as a manager, his teams compiled a 781–815 record (.489) with one championship.
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[
"Edward Dennis Edward Dennis may refer to:",
"Fred Sommers Frederic Tamler Sommers (January 1, 1923 – October 2, 2014), better known as Fred Sommers, was an American philosopher who, after an initial focus on ontology generally, turned his attention specifically to a revival of classical logic. He is the father of the philosopher Tamler Sommers. Sommers was born in New York City on January 1, 1923. His family was Jewish and he studied under Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik in the 1950s. He received his BA and PhD in philosophy at Columbia University, his dissertation being entitled \"An Empiricist Ontology: A Study in the Metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead.\" Sommers began his academic career at Columbia University, where he was assistant professor of philosophy from 1955 to 1963. He was invited to Brandeis University in 1964 as an associate professor of philosophy and was promoted to full professor in 1966. From 1965 until his retirement, he held the Harry Austryn Wolfson Chair of Philosophy; from 1993 until his death he was Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Brandeis. He died aged 91 in 2014.",
"William P. Sommers William Paul \"Bill\" Sommers (July 22, 1933January 7, 2007) was an engineer and business executive of several companies, including Booz Allen Hamilton, Iameter, and SRI International. Sommers was born in Detroit in 1933. He held a Bachelor of Science, a Master of Science in Engineering, and a Ph.D. in engineering and aeronautical engineering, all from the University of Michigan. Sommers donated a significant amount to his alma mater. Sommers worked at Booz Allen Hamilton for 29 years. He was then executive vice president of Iameter, a health care cost containment company. From 1993 to 1998, he was the CEO of SRI International. While at SRI International, he focused on cost cutting to bring the organization back to profitability.",
"Hod Eller Horace Owen Eller (July 5, 1894 – July 18, 1961), better known as Hod Eller, was a pitcher in Major League Baseball. Eller started his minor league career in 1913. In 1915, he won 19 games for the Moline Plowboys of the Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League. His performance gained the attention of the Cincinnati Reds, and he was drafted by the team after the 1916 season. He pitched five years for the Reds, going 60–40 with a 2.62 earned run average (108 Adjusted ERA+). Eller peaked in the Reds' pennant-winning 1919 season. He led the team in innings, and went 19–9 with a 2.39 ERA. On May 11 of that season, Eller no-hit the St. Louis Cardinals 6-0 at Redland Field. He then pitched two complete game victories in the World Series, but it was later revealed that members of the Chicago White Sox had intentionally thrown the series for money. In Game Five of that Series, Eller shut out the White Sox 5–0 with nine strikeouts, including six consecutively—a record that would be tied by Moe Drabowsky in the 1966 World Series opener. After his major league career ended, Eller played in the minors for a few years, last playing for the Indianapolis Indians in 1924. The Baseball Record Book records that on August 21, 1917, Eller struck out three batters on nine pitches in the ninth inning of a 7–5 win over the New York Giants; however, the \"New York Times\" from the day after the game noted that Eller allowed a single to start that inning, and so did not officially achieve an immaculate inning.",
"Günter Sommer Günter \"Baby\" Sommer (born 25 August 1943) is a German jazz drummer. Sommer was born in Dresden on 25 August 1943. His first instrument was the trumpet, which he studied at school. He started playing the drums aged 15 or 16. He studied music at Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber in Dresden. A solo percussion album, \"Hormusik\", was released by FMP in 1979. In the same year, FMP also released a trio album recorded with Peter Kowald and Wadada Leo Smith. He has worked with Smith intermittently throughout his career. During the 1980s he also worked with Peter Brötzmann, Irene Schweizer, Cecil Taylor, and with the writer Gunter Grass. In the early 1990s he began leading a trio with Didier Levallet, then with Theo Jörgensmann, and joined the faculty at Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber.",
"Duane Sommers Duane Sommers (November 15, 1932 – August 26, 2015) was an American politician who served in the Washington House of Representatives from the 6th district from 1987 to 1993 and from 1995 to 2001. He died on August 26, 2015, in Spokane, Washington at age 82.",
"Richard Sommer Richard Sommer may refer to:",
"Ed Stein Ed Stein may refer to:",
"Ed Vokes Edwin Hoskin \"Eddie\" Vokes (April 1, 1908 – June 29, 1967) was a professional ice hockey player who played five games in the National Hockey League. He played with the Chicago Black Hawks. He was born in Quill Lake, Saskatchewan.",
"Stephen Sommers Stephen Sommers (born March 20, 1962) is an American film director and screenwriter, best known for big-budget action movies, such as \"The Mummy\" (1999), its sequel, \"The Mummy Returns\" (2001), \"Van Helsing\" (2004), and \"\" (2009). He also directed \"The Adventures of Huck Finn\" (1993), Disney's live action version of \"Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book\" (1994) and the cult classic horror film \"Deep Rising\" (1998). Stephen Sommers was born in Indianapolis, and grew up in St. Cloud, Minnesota, where he attended St. Cloud Apollo High School. He is a 1980 graduate of Saint John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, and the University of Seville in Spain. After graduating, he spent four years performing as an actor in theater groups and managing rock bands throughout Europe. He eventually returned to the United States and moved to Los Angeles, where he attended the USC School of Cinematic Arts for three years, earning a master's degree and writing and directing the award-winning short film \"Perfect Alibi\". \"Perfect Alibi\" helped Sommers acquire independent funding to write and direct his first feature film, the teen racing film \"Catch Me If You Can\", filmed for $800,000 on location in his hometown of St. Cloud. The film was sold at the Cannes Film Festival for $7 million and later debuted on video in the United States. Almost four years later, broke and in danger of having his house repossessed, he wrote and directed an adaptation of Mark Twain's classic \"The Adventures of Huck Finn\" for Walt Disney Pictures, as well as \"Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book\". He later wrote the screenplays for \"Gunmen\" and \"Tom and Huck\", which he also executive produced for Disney (along with a TV version of \"Oliver Twist\" in 1997 starring Richard Dreyfuss and Elijah Wood), and worked as a staff writer at Hollywood Pictures. While there, he worked on a script called \"Tentacle\", which he later directed under the title \"Deep Rising\" in 1998. In 1999, he wrote and directed Universal Studios' big-budget remake of \"The Mummy\"."
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[
"Dennis Sommers"
] |
Who died later, James Sibley Watson or Sir Benjamin Ayloffe, 4Th Baronet?
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Benjamin Ayloffe Benjamin Ayloffe may refer to:
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[
"Sir James Graham, 1st Baronet Sir James Graham, 1st Baronet may refer to:",
"Hugh Watson Admiral Sir Hugh Dudley Richards Watson (20 April 1872 – 22 May 1954) was a Royal Navy officer who became Naval Secretary. Watson joined the Royal Navy in 1885. He was on 6 May 1902 appointed 1st Lieutenant on the armoured cruiser HMS \"Sutlej\", soon to be commissioned for service on the China station. The following year he was promoted to the rank of Commander, and appointed Commander of the School of Physical Training before becoming Naval Attaché in Berlin in 1910 and then serving in World War I as Captain of the cruiser HMS \"Essex\" from 1914, the battleship HMS \"Bellerophon\" from 1915 and the battleship HMS Canada from 1918. He played one first-class cricket match for the Marylebone Cricket Club in 1908. After the War he served with the Allied Post War Control Commission and then became Naval Secretary in 1921 before becoming Commander of the 4th Battle Squadron (renumbered the 3rd Battle Squadron in November 1924) and Second-in-Command of the Mediterranean Fleet in August 1923. His last appointment was as Admiral commanding the Reserve Fleet in 1926 before he retired in 1928.",
"Sir Benjamin Ayloffe, 2nd Baronet Sir Benjamin Ayloffe, 2nd Baronet (29 August 1592 – March 1662) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1661 to 1662. He supported the Royalist cause in the English Civil War. Ayloffe was the second son of Sir William Ayloffe, 1st Baronet and his first wife Catharine, daughter and coheir to John Sterne, of Melbourn, Cambridgeshire. His elder brother William died within the lifetime of his father so Ayloffe inherited the estates and the baronetcy on his father's death in 1627. At the outbreak of the English Civil War King Charles I appointed Ayloffe High Sheriff of Essex. Consequently, he was imprisoned by Parliament, his estates being sequestrated and himself obliged to sell that of Brittains. He was fined, 29 May 1649, £2,000, increased to £3,000. In 1661 Ayloffe was elected Member of Parliament for Essex in the Cavalier Parliament. He died in 1662 and was buried at Braxted. Ayloffe married three times. Firstly, about 1611, to Alice, daughter of Martin Archdale. She died and was buried on 28 November 1612, at Hornchurch, they had no children. He remarried on 9 May 1616, at Barking, Essex, to Margaret (she was 5th daughter of Thomas Fanshawe, of Jenkins in Barking, remembrancer of the exchequer, and sister to Sir Henry Fanshawe). They had one daughter: Catharine, who married Thomas Hardwick, of Leeds, in Yorkshire and three sons: It has been claimed that a fourth son, John Aylett, emigrated to America based on a series of letters discovered by W.W. Fontaine among Aylett family papers in Virginia, the originals of which have disappeared. Noted genealogist Lothrop Withington commented that although these letters could be authentic, there are some strong reasons to suspect that they could have been forgeries that were planted to fool Fontaine, who was an avid family historian. Ayloffe's third marriage was to Margaret, sister of George Porter. She remarried John Wall, of St. Clement Danes, Middlesex and died 1682.",
"Frederick Watson Frederick or Fred Watson may refer to:",
"John H. Watson John H. Watson may refer to:",
"Hewett Watson Hewett Cottrell Watson (9 May 1804 – 27 July 1881) was a phrenologist, botanist and evolutionary theorist. He was born in Firbeck, near Rotherham, Yorkshire, and died at Thames Ditton, Surrey. Watson was the eldest son of Holland Watson, a Justice of the Peace and Mayor of Congleton in Cheshire, and his wife, Harriet Powell. His mother died when he was fifteen. He had seven older sisters and two younger brothers and his early life was overshadowed by a terrible relationship with his father, a reactionary conservative whose character Watson himself detailed in later years. As a teenager, Watson suffered a serious injury to his knee in a cricket match, and never recovered full movement in the joint again. Watson's mother had attempted to distract him from family tensions by sending him to work with the family's gardener, and it was after her death that his obsession with botany began. While training for the legal profession in Liverpool, Watson became interested in phrenology and decided to study medicine and natural history at Edinburgh University (from 1828 to 1832). He was elected a Senior President of the Royal Medical Society as an undergraduate, but left without taking a degree because of a breakdown in his health. In Edinburgh, he became friendly with the botanist Robert Graham, who encouraged his interest in biogeography, and with the phrenologist George Combe, joining the Edinburgh Phrenological Society in 1829. Soon afterwards, Watson inherited an estate in Derbyshire. In 1833, he moved to Thames Ditton. He travelled to the Azores in 1842, spending three months collecting botanical specimens from four of the larger islands, while serving at his own expense as ship's botanist for the \"Styx\" under the command of Captain Vidal. Watson edited the \"Phrenological Journal\" from 1837 to 1840 and the \"London Catalogue of British Plants\" with George Edgar Dennes from 1844 to 1874. Watson was noted for his intellectual brilliance and for his often difficult and cantankerous personality. He led an isolated and restricted life, never married and travelled only once outside Britain. He applied unsuccessfully – or withdrew his applications – for senior academic positions in London and Dublin and for a senior post at Kew – yet he was a widely acknowledged authority on botanical science and on the distribution of botanical species in the British Isles.",
"Albert Watson Albert Watson may refer to:",
"Sir Abraham Hume, 1st Baronet Sir Abraham Hume, 1st Baronet (1703 – 10 October 1772) was a British businessman and MP. He was the fourth son of Robert Home (subsequently Hume) of Ayton, Berwick. Hume was a Principal Managing Owner for groups which built ships and hired them to the East India Company. He was elected Member of Parliament for Steyning in 1747–54, and Tregony in 1761–68, both rotten boroughs. After inheriting the Wormleybury estate from his brother Alexander in 1765 he rebuilt the house his brother had commissioned in 1734. He was given a baronet on 4 April 1769. He was the father of 2 sons and a daughter by his wife Hannah, sixth daughter of Sir Thomas Frederick and was succeeded by his eldest son Sir Abraham Hume, 2nd Baronet. Their daughter Hannah married the wit James Hare.",
"James H. Watson James H. Watson (1845 – December 29, 1908) was an English-born merchant and political figure in Newfoundland. He represented Trinity Bay in the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly from 1874 to 1882 and from 1893 to 1894. He was born in Torquay and came to Newfoundland in 1869 where he entered business with his brother Ellis at Hant's Harbour. He was defeated when he ran for reelection in 1882. Watson set up business at L'Anse-au-Loup in 1890. He served as assistant clerk for the assembly from 1892 to 1893. He was elected again in 1893 and unseated by petition in 1894. In 1894, Watson was named a customs inspector at St. John's. He returned to England in 1904 and later died at Torquay in 1908.",
"Joseph Ayloffe Sir Joseph Ayloffe, 6th Baronet FRS, FSA (1708 – 19 April 1781, London) was an English antiquary. He was the great-grandson of Sir William Ayloffe, 1st Baronet, through his third wife (Alice, daughter of James Stokes of Stoke near Coventry), their first son was Joseph Ayloffe, Joseph Ayloffe, barrister-at-law of Gray's Inn and sometime recorder of Kingston upon Thames, who died in 1726 and was this man's father. Joseph was born in Sussex, and became 6th Baronet Ayloffe, of Braxted Magna; on his death, his baronetcy became extinct. Ayloffe was educated at Westminster School, admitted a student of Lincoln's Inn in 1724, and spent some time at St John's College, Oxford before 1728. In December 1730 he succeeded, as sixth in succession, to the family baronetcy on the death of his unmarried cousin, the Rev. Sir John Ayloffe, a descendant of the first family of the original holder of the title. Sir Joseph seems early in life to have shown an interest in antiquities. He received at once the recognition of the learned, although for many years he was merely collecting information and published nothing. On 10 February 1731/1732 he was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, and on 27 May of the same year a fellow of the Royal Society. Seven years later he became a member of the well-known Spalding Gentlemen's Society, a literary club. But he did not confine himself altogether to antiquarian research. In 1736–1737 he was appointed secretary to the commission superintending the erection of Westminster Bridge; in 1750 he was auditor-general of the hospitals of Bethlehem and Bridewell; and in 1763, on the removal of the state archives from Whitehall and the establishment of a State Paper Office at the Treasury, he was nominated one of its three keepers. In 1751 Ayloffe took a prominent part in procuring a charter of incorporation for the Society of Antiquaries, of which he was for many years a vice-president. He frequently read papers at its meetings."
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"James Sibley Watson"
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Did Eberhard Nestle and Zélia Cardoso De Mello share the same nationality?
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Zé de Mello José Inácio de Mello (born 7 January 1934), known as Zé de Mello, is a Brazilian footballer. He played in five matches for the Brazil national football team in 1959. He was also part of Brazil's squad for the 1959 South American Championship that took place in Ecuador.
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"Leites Nestlé Leites Nestlé or Leite Moça was a Brazilian women's volleyball club representing Sorocaba and Jundiaí, SP, winner of the 1994 FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship. The team played the home games at the Ginásio de Esportes Dr. Nicolino de Lucca, in Jundiaí, SP. The team was found over the \"Clube Atlético Sorocaba\" in Sorocaba in 1993, with the sponsorship from the product Leite Moça from the Swiss company Nestlé; and transferred to Jundiaí in 1996. Three years later the team folded. Leite Moça participated at the third edition of the FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship in 1994, held in São Paulo, Brazil; winning the gold medal. In that tournament Ana Moser was the MVP and Best Server and Fernanda Venturini was Best Setter. At the first season of the Superliga Brasileira de Voleibol, after being renamed from \"Liga Nacional\", Leite Moça win the championship under the guidance of the head coach Sérgio Negrão and players like Ana Paula and Fernanda Venturini, who was the MVP of the tournament. The next season, once again Venturini led Leite Moça to the championship, defeating BCN/Osasco 3-0 in the final series. The team also won the 1995 Paulista Championship. In 1996 the team moved to Jundiaí and was renamed \"Leites Nestlé\", always under the Swiss sponsor, conquering the third Brazilian Superliga title in a row. The team won the South American Club Championship in 1997. conquering the third Brazilian Superliga title in a row. After three consecutive gold medals, the team ended the season with the second place of the Superliga after losing from Rexona and won the 1998 South American Club Championship. What it would be the last season for Leites Nestlé, after finishing in 6th place in the regular season, the team could qualify to the semifinals, being defeated again by Rexona, but winning the third place match to Universidade de Guarulhos",
"Ingrid Nestle Ingrid Nestle (born 22 December 1977) is a German politician of Alliance 90/The Greens who has been a member of the Bundestag, the German parliament, from 2009 to 2012 and since 2017. Nestle was born in Schwäbisch Gmünd. From 1998 to 2003 she studied energy management and environmental management at the University of Flensburg. Her 2012 dissertation in economics was titled \"The costs of climate change in the agricultural sector – A comparison of two calculation approaches\" She now lives in Elmshorn. Nestle became a member of the Green party in 2001. From 2012 to 2017, Nestle served as state secretary under minister Robert Habeck in the state government of Minister-President Torsten Albig of Schleswig-Holstein. Nestle has been a member of the German Bundestag since the 2017 elections, representing the Steinburg – Dithmarschen South districts. In parliament, she has since been serving on the Committee on Economic Affairs and Energy. In the negotiations to form a so-called traffic light coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the Green Party and the Free Democratic Party (FDP) following the 2021 federal elections, Nestle was part of her party's delegation in the working group on climate protection and energy policy, co-chaired by Matthias Miersch, Oliver Krischer and Lukas Köhler.",
"SICAL SICAL is a Portuguese coffee brand company under the Nestlé portfolio since 1987.",
"Mello (surname) Mello is a Portuguese surname. Originally from Italy it is popular name in Portugal and Brazil.",
"Zélia Cardoso de Mello Zélia Maria Cardoso de Mello (born September 20, 1953 in São Paulo) served as Brazil's Minister of Economy from 1990 to 1991 under Fernando Collor de Mello. She was later married to Brazilian comedian Chico Anysio, with whom she has two children, Rodrigo and Victoria. The couple divorced in 1998. Zélia Cardoso de Mello worked in the academic, public and private sectors in Brazil. She graduated from FEA-USP where she also got her PhD degree in Economics. She was a professor at the University of São Paulo for almost 20 years. Her political career began in 1986 when Dilson Funaro, the Minister of Finance of Brazil, invited her to join his \"Economic Advisory Team\" as Director of the National Treasure Dept. In 1990 Cardoso de Mello was appointed the National Minister of Economy, Finance and Planning of Brazil under president Fernando Collor de Mello. After significant criticism, she resigned this position in May 1991. In 1991, she released a biography, \"Zelia, A Passion\". It became a best-seller, perhaps because, according to a review, \"It says little about tax reform and inflation, but a lot about Cardoso's sexual exploits in office.\" In 1995 she moved to New York City and became a visiting scholar at the \"Institute of Latin America and Iberian Studies\" at Columbia University. Since 1998, Cardoso de Mello has served executive positions at several major financial advisory companies focused on Brazil, including Global Access Investments, Orix and Lily Pond Capital. Her academic career was entirely accomplished in the School of Business and Economics at the University of São Paulo, where she achieved both her college degree and her doctorate, and where served as university professor. She is currently a partner at New York-based Aquila Associates. As minister, Zélia was responsible for the implementation of the \"Plano Collor\", which combined fiscal and trade liberalization with radical inflation stabilization measures. A monetarist inflation stabilization was coupled with an industrial and foreign trade reform program, the \"Industrial and Foreign Trade Policy\" (Portuguese: \"Política Industrial e de Comércio Exterior\"), better known as PICE, and a privatization program dubbed the \"National Privatization Program\" (Portuguese: \"Programa Nacional de Desestatização\"), better known as the PND.",
"Roger Mello Roger Mello (born 20 November 1965) is a Brazilian children's book illustrator. He was the first artist from Latin America to win the Hans Christian Andersen Award.",
"Nestlé Waters Nestlé Waters is a French multinational bottled water division of Nestlé. Sales: 7.625 billion CHF Nestlé Waters has roughly 31,740 employees and includes 51 distinct brands such as Nestlé Pure Life, Arrowhead, Poland Spring, Deer Park, Ozarka, Zephyrhills, Acqua Panna, San Pellegrino, Perrier, Vittel, Al Manhal and Buxton. In 2008, Nestlé Waters became the largest bottled water brand in the world. 1843: Henri Nestlé establishes his first lemonade and water bottling factory. 1866 Foundation of the Nestlé Group 1969: Acquisition of a 30% stake in the Société Générale des Eaux Minérales de Vittel in France 1974: Acquisition of the German Blaue Quellen group 1987: Nestlé S.A. takes a majority stake in Vittel and joins with Arrowhead 1992: Acquisition of the Source Perrier S.A. Source Perrier SA Group. Nestlé becomes the leading player on the world bottled water market, under the name of Nestlé Sources International (NSI) 1996: NSI changes its name to accelerate its international development and becomes: Perrier Vittel S.A. 1998: Take-over of Italy's leading bottled water producer, Sanpellegrino S.p.A. and launch of Nestlé Pure Life, the first multi-site bottled water under the Nestlé Brand 2000: Simultaneous launch of Nestlé Aquarel, pan-European, multi-site spring water on six markets 2001: Acquisition by Perrier Vittel of Al Manhal, the leading bottled water company in Saudi Arabia which becomes the leading bottled water player in the Middle East region 2002: Perrier Vittel becomes Nestlé Waters CEO Leader 2003: Nestlé Waters acquires the Powwow Group 2005: Nestlé Waters further develops its business on the African continent via the launch of Nestlé Pure Life in Nigeria and the creation of a partnership in Algeria 2006: Nestlé Waters acquires the majority shares in Erikli and becomes the Turkish market leader. 2007: Nestlé Waters acquires Sources Minérales Henniez S.A. and becomes the Swiss leader in the bottled water market. Joint venture agreements signed in Mexico and Chile.",
"João Cardoso João Cardoso may refer to:",
"Carlos Cardoso Carlos Cardoso may refer to:",
"Zé Manel In Portuguese, Zé Manel or Ze'Manel () is a common short form of the name \"José Manuel\", and can refer to:"
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Do both directors of films My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done and The Silent Partner (1978 Film) share the same nationality?
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Silent Partner (2001 film) Silent Partner is a 2001 Australian film directed by Alkinos Tsilimidos and starring David Field and Syd Brisbane.
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"The Silent Partner (soundtrack) The Silent Partner is a 1979 soundtrack album composed by Oscar Peterson, for the 1978 film \"The Silent Partner\". \"All compositions by Oscar Peterson\"",
"Partner (1968 film) Partner is a 1968 Italian drama film by Bernardo Bertolucci. Based on the 1846 novella \"The Double\" by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, it entered the 29th Venice Film Festival and the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs section at the 22nd Cannes Film Festival. This film follows a college student who has a routine life and who encounters a twin he is not related to. Along the way, he discovers that the twin friend has many qualities he doesn't have.",
"Silent Love (1977 film) Silent Love () is a 1977 Dutch drama film written and directed by René van Nie. It was entered into the 10th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"My Lover, My Son My Lover, My Son is a 1970 American-British coproduction drama film directed by John Newland. It tells the story of a mother played by Romy Schneider clinging to her maturing son. The film is based on Edward Grierson's 1952 novel \"Reputation for a Song\". Francesca Anderson leads an unhappy marriage with her husband Robert. Her real attention is dedicated to her son James, who reminds her of her late lover Macer. Francesca is the only one who knows that James is not Robert's, but Macer's son. So Francesca reacts jealously when James falls in love with a girlfriend, Julie. James intervenes in an argument between his parents, and kills Robert. During James' trial, Francesca gives the crucial testimony in favour of her son, who is found not guilty. To Francesca's discomfort, James escapes his mother's clinging and decides to stay with Julie.",
"John Sayles John Thomas Sayles (born September 28, 1950) is an American independent film director, screenwriter, editor, actor, and novelist. He has twice been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, for \"Passion Fish\" (1992) and \"Lone Star\" (1996). His film \"Men with Guns\" (1997) was nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film. His directorial debut, \"Return of the Secaucus 7\" (1980), has been added to the National Film Registry. Sayles was born on September 28, 1950, in Schenectady, New York, the son of Mary (\"née\" Rausch), a teacher, and Donald John Sayles, a school administrator. Both of Sayles's parents were Catholic and of half-Irish descent. Sayles has referred to himself as a \"Catholic atheist\". He attended Williams College with frequent collaborators Gordon Clapp and David Strathairn, as well as his longtime partner, Maggie Renzi. Sayles earned a B.A. in psychology in 1972. After college, Sayles moved to Boston where he worked a variety of blue-collar jobs while writing short stories for \"The Atlantic\". These writings culminated in his first novel, \"The Pride of the Bimbos\", published in 1975. Like Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola, Sayles began his film career working with Roger Corman. In 1979, Sayles used $30,000 he earned writing scripts for Corman to fund his first film, \"Return of the Secaucus 7\". To make the film on a limited budget, he set the film in a large house so that he did not have to travel to or get permits for different locations, set the story over a three-day weekend to limit costume changes, and wrote about people his age so he could cast his friends in it. The film received near-unanimous critical acclaim at the time and has held its reputation. In November 1997, the National Film Preservation Board announced that \"Return of the Secaucus 7\" would be one of the 25 films selected that year for preservation in the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress.",
"Herbert Golder Herbert Golder (born 1952) is a professor of Classical Studies at Boston University. He has a Ph.D. in classical languages and literature from Yale University. His specialty is Greek mythology and he has to his credit a number of books and films. He played Rabbi Edelmann in the Werner Herzog film \"Invincible\", he was also an assistant director on that film and the co-writer of \"My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done?\". In addition, he is the Editor-in-Chief of \"Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics\".",
"Mother and Son (1931 film) Mother and Son is a 1931 talking Pre code film directed by John P. McCarthy and starring screen veteran Clara Kimball Young. It was distributed by Monogram Pictures.",
"Silent Partner (1944 film) Silent Partner is a 1944 American thriller film directed by George Blair and written by Dane Lussier and Gertrude Walker. Starring William \"Bill\" Henry, Beverly Lloyd, Grant Withers, Ray Walker, Joan Blair and Roland Drew, the film was released on June 9, 1944, by Republic Pictures. Reporters investigating the death of a friend begin to suspect that their newspaper's editor might be responsible.",
"My Son (2021 film) My Son is a 2021 mystery thriller film written and directed by Christian Carion. It is an English-language remake of his 2017 French film \"\", and stars James McAvoy and Claire Foy. Edmond Murray is an absent father who is called to the site of his son Ethan's disappearance. He meets and briefly consoles his ex-wife Joan there, and promptly joins a search party before being interviewed by the police. After being interviewed by the police, Edmond visits his ex-wife's new partner, Frank, and the two begin talking. After seeing that Frank has made plans for a new home for himself and Joan (without bedroom accommodation for Ethan), and upon hearing that Frank has given Joan a Valium tablet to help her sleep, Edmond becomes irate and confrontational, accusing Frank of being responsible for his son's disappearance. He assaults him in the kitchen, knocking him unconscious and calls Inspector Roy to have him look into Frank. Edmond is arrested but no charges are filed, as Frank is apparently forgiving of Edmond due to his emotional stress at the moment. Edmond is later met by Inspector Roy, who hides Edmond's phone in a microwave oven (so as not to be heard), and informs him that he has been taken off the case without any explanation. Edmond looks through Frank's phone, which he took after knocking him out, and finds videos of Ethan leading up to the disappearance. During this, he realises there is a car present in both videos, two weeks apart, hidden barely out of sight. Relying on Joan's brother who works in the insurance industry, Edmond obtains the vehicle owner's address, a William O'Connor who lives at an isolated farm. After arriving at the location, Edmond hears a vehicle approach. Hiding, he grabs a crowbar and eventually knocks out O'Connor, and ties him up to a post in the shed. After an aggressive interrogation involving a blowtorch, O'Connor reveals that he is responsible for sending pictures of children outside of schools to a kidnapping ring operated for paedophiles, who then \"choose\" which children will be kidnapped. After being told of his son's location, at a hilltop lodge, Edmond drives to near the lodge, continuing on foot to hide his approach. Joan arrives at the O'Connor farm, and finds another kidnapped boy unconscious in the back of his vehicle; Edmond had not thought to look.",
"Father and Son (1929 German film) Father and Son () is a 1929 German silent film directed by Géza von Bolváry and starring Harry Liedtke, Rolf von Goth, and Charles Puffy. The film's art direction was by Robert Neppach and Erwin Scharf."
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Where did Floris Iii, Count Of Holland's mother die?
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Floris IV, Count of Holland Floris IV (24 June 1210 – 19 July 1234) was the count of Holland from 1222 to 1234. He was born in The Hague, a son of William I of Holland and his first wife, Adelaide of Guelders. Floris succeeded his father in 1222. His regent was Baldwin of Bentheim. He acquired the Land of Altena. He had constant disputes with the bishop of Utrecht, Otto II of Lippe, but helped him against the peasants of Drenthe in 1227. Floris fought in the crusade against the Stedinger north of Bremen in 1234. On 19 July 1234, he was killed at a tournament in Corbie, France. He was buried at Rijnsburg Abbey. Floris married, before 6 December 1224, his stepaunt Matilda, daughter of Duke Henry I of Brabant. They had the following children:
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"Bertha of Holland Bertha of Holland ( 1055 – 15 October 1094), also known as Berthe or Bertha of Frisia and erroneously as Berta or Bertrada, was queen of France from 1072 until 1092, as the first wife of King Philip I of France. Bertha's marriage to the king in 1072 was a result of peace negotiations between him and her stepfather, Count Robert I of Flanders. After nine years of childlessness, the royal couple had three children, including Philip's successor, Louis VI. Philip, however, grew tired of his wife by 1090, and repudiated her in 1092 in order to marry the already married Bertrade of Montfort. That marriage was a scandal since both Philip and Bertrade were already married to other people, at least until Queen Bertha died the next year. Bertha was the daughter of Count Floris I of Holland and Gertrude of Saxony. Bertha had six siblings and both of her parents came from large families. Her father ruled a territory vaguely described as \"Friesland west of the Vlie\", which is where Bertha spent her childhood. Count Floris I was assassinated in 1061, and two years later her mother remarried to Robert of Flanders. Robert, now known as Robert the Frisian, became guardian of Bertha and her six siblings. In 1070, Robert the Frisian became involved in a war with King Philip I of France over succession to the County of Flanders. Within two years, Robert and Philip concluded a peace treaty which was to be sealed by a marriage; Robert's own daughters were too young, but their half-sister Bertha was just the right age. Robert thus agreed to the marriage of his stepdaughter to King Philip. Bertha married Philip, thus becoming queen of the Franks, probably in 1072. Bertha was, at the time, the lowest-ranking woman to marry a French king; no suitable princess could be found, since they were all too closely related to Philip for the marriage to any of them to be seen as perfectly valid by the Church. Bertha had no kings among her traceable ancestors and lacked even tenuous links with the Carolingian that her predecessors could claim. Consequently, contemporary chroniclers did not even try to present her lineage as more exalted than that of a count's daughter.",
"Dirk VI, Count of Holland Dirk VI (c. 11145 August 1157) was Count of Holland between 1121 and 1157, at first, during his minority, under the regency of his mother Petronilla. He was the son of Count Floris II. After his death he was succeeded by his eldest son Floris III. He married Sofie of Salm, Countess of Rheineck and Bentheim. She was heiress of Bentheim, which she ruled together with her husband and which was inherited by the couple's second son Otto after his parents' death. When his father died in 1122, Dirk was only 7 years old and his mother, Petronilla, governed the county as regent. In 1123 she supported the uprising of her half-brother, Lothair of Süpplingenburg, Duke of Saxony against Emperor Henry V. After Lothair had been elected king of Germany himself in 1125 he returned Leiden and Rijnland to Holland, which had both been awarded to the Bishop of Utrecht in 1064 (Later on during Dirk's reign the wooden fortifications at Leiden would be replaced by a stone castle). Because Petronilla saw little ability or ambition in Dirk as he grew up, she stalled letting go of the regency when he reached adulthood (fifteen years old), until her favourite son Floris could attempt to take over the county. This Floris, called \"the Black\" () did possess those qualities which his older brother seemed to lack. He openly revolted against him and was from 1129 to 1131 recognised as Count of Holland by, amongst others, King Lothair and Andreas of Kuyk, Bishop of Utrecht. After March 1131 Dirk again appears as count of Holland alongside him, the brothers apparently having reached an agreement. Only a few months later, however, in August 1131 Floris accepted an offer from the West-Frisians to become lord of their entire territory, which reignited the conflict with his brother. After this the people from Kennemerland joined the revolt as well. A year later, in August 1132 King Lothair intervened and managed to reconcile the brothers. This did not pacify the Frisians however, who continued their revolt, which was nonetheless eventually suppressed.",
"Flines Abbey Flines Abbey (; also \"L'Honneur Notre-Dame de Flines\") was a Cistercian nunnery in Flines-lez-Raches near Douai, in the Nord department of France. It was founded in about 1234 by Countess Margaret of Flanders, and served as the burial place not only of Margaret in 1278 but of Margaret's husband William II of Dampierre (body transferred to Saint-Dizier in 1257) and their son Guy, Count of Flanders (1304), as well as of Guy's wives Matilda of Béthune (1263) and Isabelle of Luxembourg (1298). The abbey owned farms in Faumont, Nomain, Coutiches, Cantin, Lambersart and Howardries (Belgium). It was destroyed in the French Revolution; the last remains disappeared in the middle of the 19th century.",
"Baldwin II van Holland Baldwin van Holland (died 30 April 1196 in Mainz) was a bishop of Utrecht from 1178 to 1196 Baldwin was the son of Dirk VI, Count of Holland and Sophia of Rheineck, and brother to counts Otto van Bentheim and Floris III, Count of Holland. Before Baldwin became bishop of Utrecht, he had been Archbishop of Bremen and chaplain of Henry the Lion. With a relative as Bishop, the count of Holland was about to expand his power in Utrecht. During his rule Baldwin was involved in struggles with Otto I, Count of Guelders over the Veluwe and Salland, and with the lords of Groningen and Coevorden. These wars resulted in numerous raids and plunders in the Oversticht, which weighed heavily on the bishopric's finances. After his death Baldwin was interred in St. Martin's Cathedral, Utrecht.",
"Matilda of Brabant, Countess of Holland Mathilde of Brabant also called Machteld (c. 1200 – 22 December 1267) was Countess of Holland by marriage to Floris IV, Count of Holland. She was regent of Holland and Zeeland in 1234–1235. She was the fourth child and daughter of Mathilde of Flanders and Henry I, Duke of Brabant. She married Henry II, Count Palatine of the Rhine (died 1214) in Aachen in 1212. She married Floris IV, Count of Holland on 6 December 1224. When her spouse was killed at a tournament at Corbie in 1234, their eldest son William was only seven years old. Mathilde attempted to assume control as regent during his minority, as well as gaining full personal control of the County of Zeeland, which had been promised her as her dowry land. Neither of this was however accepted, and in 1235, she was forced to resign for all ambitions of regency. Instead her sons paternal uncles William and Otto, bishop of Utrecht, were his guardians until 1239. After her son attained legal majority Mathilde stepped forward to assume an active role in his court and household, and became a prominent benefactor of abbeys and various institutions.",
"Pieter Floriszoon Pieter Florisz (1602 or 1606, Monnickendam – 8 November 1658, Øresund) was a Dutch Vice Admiral during the 17th century. He died during the Battle of the Sound. Pieter Florisz was born around 1600 in Monnickendam and lived there until 1654. His father was Floris Florisz Houtcooper, a timber merchant, who also worked as a ship carpenter and started his own shipyard. His youngest brother Floris wore the name Blom or Bloem. It is not known with certainty whether Pieter also called himself or was named so. Little is known about the first forty years of his life. What is known is that he married three times and had four children who all died young. There are some brief indications that he worked for an Amsterdam shipping company that operated in the West Indies. There is more information about the last eighteen years of his life, in which he has participated in various actions and major naval battles on ships of the Dutch war fleet (as captain, bailiff at night, and Vice admiral of the Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier). Pieter Floriszoon died on 8 November 1658 during the Battle of the Sound. The Danish king ordered an embalmer to embalm him with great honors and to be laid out in Denmark. On 8 November 1659, a state funeral took place in the Grote Kerk in Hoorn, where later a marble tomb was erected, a work by Pieter van Campfort, which would be largely lost in a fire in 1838. All that remains is the wooden lid of his coffin and a cracked marble image of the fatal Battle of the Sound. The Lid and image can both be seen in the Westfries Museum in Hoorn. It is said that there were no famous last words in his dying hour, only his great courage.",
"Margaret of Brabant, Countess of Flanders Margaret of Brabant (9 February 1323 – 1380) was a countess consort of Flanders. She was the second daughter of Duke John III of Brabant and Mary of Évreux. She was the only child of Duke John to have children. In 1347 she married Louis II of Flanders, who was then sixteen years old and already count of Flanders. On 13 April 1350 their daughter, Margaret III, Countess of Flanders, was baptized. Through this daughter, their only surviving child, Brabant came under the influence of Burgundy when she married Philip the Bold. On 26 September 1371, Margaret and her mother-in-law, Margaret of France, countess of Artois, with their attendants, were guests of Philip the Bold, duke of Burgundy for supper in Lens. Soon afterwards, Margaret left Flanders and went to reside permanently, far from her husband, in the county of Réthel, where she died in April 1380 (after Easter).",
"Petronilla of Lorraine Petronilla of Lorraine ( 1082 – 23 May 1144) was Countess of Holland by marriage to Floris II, Count of Holland, and regent of the County of Holland during the minority of her son Dirk VI in 1121-1129. She was a daughter of Theodoric II, Duke of Lorraine and Hedwig of Formbach. Named after her maternal grandmother, she changed her name from Gertrude to Petronilla after her marriage in 1100. In 1121, after her husband's early death, she became regent for their son, Dirk VI. She is described as an ambitious and dominant regent who ruled with a \"strong hand\". In 1123-25, she gave military support to her brother the emperor in his struggle with his rival emperor Henry. After Baldwin VII, Count of Flanders died without heirs, she supported her son's claim to become Count of Flanders during the Flemish succession war of 1127, but Baldwin was eventually succeeded by Charles I. Her mandate as regent formally expired when her son reached maturity in 1129, but according to contemporary Egmond chronicle, she remained de facto regent until 1133. In the struggle for power between Dirk and his younger brother, Floris the Black in 1129-31, she supported the latter upon his first attempt. In 1131, however, she retracted her support and refused to support him. Petronilla founded Rijnsburg Abbey in 1133, where it seems that she retired from court and politics and spent the rest of her life. She was also buried there after her death in 1144. Petronilla descendant Ada was still in charge in the 1200s. She was abbess when her cousin sold the abbey and Ada was obliged to use her own money to repurchase it. With Floris II she had the following children:",
"Florent of Hainaut Florent of Hainaut (also \"Floris\" or \"Florence\"; Hainaut, also spelled \"Hainault\") (c. 1255 – 23 January 1297) was Prince of Achaea from 1289 to his death, in right of his wife, Isabella of Villehardouin. He was the son of John I of Avesnes and Adelaide of Holland. From his father he received the stadholdership (government) of Zeeland. After he left Zeeland, he took up service with Charles II of Naples, who made him constable of the Kingdom of Naples. After his marriage with Isabella on 16 September 1289, they had one daughter, Matilda. She succeeded him and her mother as princess. Florent settled with his wife in Morea. He negotiated the Treaty of Glarentsa with the Byzantine Empire in 1290. The situation for the Franks in Greece was hopeless by this time, however. The fall of the Angevins in Sicily meant that they were preoccupied with recouping territory there and few Western governments would send troops to defend Morea. Florent thus made peace and maintained it until 1293, when the Greeks retook Kalamata. Florent did not despair and did not reopen the war which had been ongoing until his succession: he instead sent an embassy in protest to Andronikos II Palaiologos, and the emperor returned Kalamata. In 1296, the Greeks retook the castle of Saint George in Arcadia. Florent besieged the castle, but died before it could be taken.",
"Margaret of Holland, Countess of Henneberg Margaret of Henneberg (1234 – 26 March 1276) was a Dutch countess, known for a famous medieval legend. She was a daughter of Count Floris IV of Holland and his wife, Matilda of Brabant. Margaret married on Pentecost of 1249 to Count Herman I of Henneberg-Coburg. This marriage had political background, because Hermann had hoped to be elected King of the Germans earlier in 1246, but had lost to Margaret's brother William II. In an attempt to strengthen his influence in Germany, William had arranged a marriage between his sister and a German count. Margaret of Henneberg and her husband lived in Coburg, although the couple also owned a residence in Loosduinen, where they frequently stayed. Their eldest son, Herman, was born in 1250 and died young. He was buried in the church of Loosduinen. Margaret and Herman had two children who reached adulthood: In the spring of 1276, Margaret fell seriously ill in Loosduinen. Before her death she was able to dictate some letters about her inheritance to her nephew Floris V of Holland. She died on Good Friday of 1276 and, like her first son, she was buried in the church of the abbey of Loosduinen. From notes made by her widower, it is known that her death was unusual. Later, however, a legend was formed that she had died in childbirth after giving birth to no fewer than 365 children. An early form of this legend can be found in the 14th-century , which can be found in the University Library of Utrecht. It briefly reports that she died after giving birth to 364 sons and daughters. The children did not survive. They were all buried together in Loosduinen, where an epitaph still exists. Another 14th-century source is De Clerk's . It gives a reason for the unusual multiple births. Margaret had on one occasion insulted a mother of twins with the assertion that these children would have to have two different fathers. As a punishment, she had been bewitched. The \"Kronyk\" mentions that 365 mouse-sized children were baptized in a large vessel and died afterwards. Hermann Korner wrote his \"Chronica Novella\" between 1415 and 1535. Here, we find the legend in an embellished form."
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[
"Jerusalem"
] |
Which film was released earlier, Fatal Termination or The Mighty Celt?
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Fatal Termination Fatal Termination (also known as Death Blow, original title Chi se da feng bao) is a 1990 Hong Kong action film starring Moon Lee and Robin Shou. Two groups of warring terrorists attempt to get hold of an arsenal of weapons due to pass through Hong Kong, the plot is further complicated by two sets of investigating cops, a corrupt customs official and a vicious gangster.
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"The Fatal Discovery The Fatal Discovery is a 1769 tragedy by the British writer John Home. The original cast included Spranger Barry as Ronan, Samuel Reddish as Orellan, Francis Aickin as Connan, John Palmer as Durstan, Thomas Jefferson as Kathul, James Aickin as Euran and Ann Street Barry as Rivine.",
"We Who Are About to Die We Who Are About to Die is a 1937 film directed by Christy Cabanne and starring Preston Foster, Ann Dvorak, and John Beal. It was based on a book by David Lansom, who was tried four times for murdering his wife before being set free. A man is kidnapped by mobsters after quitting his job, then wrongly arrested, tried, and sentenced to death for murders they committed. A suspicious detective thinks he is innocent and works to save his life. Lansom was hired by producer Edward Small to work on the script.",
"Killing Bono Killing Bono is a 2011 comedy film directed by Nick Hamm, based on Neil McCormick's 2003 memoir \"Killing Bono: I Was Bono's Doppelgänger\". The film stars Ben Barnes as Neil McCormick, Robert Sheehan as Ivan McCormick and Martin McCann as Irish singer Bono. It marked the final film role of Pete Postlethwaite, who died three months before its release. The film loosely recreates the story of young Irish rocker McCormick and his younger brother, Ivan, who attempt to become rock stars but can only look on as their secondary school friends form U2 and become the biggest band in the world. The film was shot in Northern Ireland, was funded by Northern Ireland Screen and was released by Paramount Pictures (the distributor of U2's film \"Rattle and Hum\") in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 1 April 2011. Sony Music Entertainment released the film's soundtrack worldwide. The European premiere was held in the Savoy Cinema in Dublin.",
"Shane O'Sullivan (filmmaker) Shane O'Sullivan (born 1969) is an Irish writer and filmmaker, based in London. He is best known for his work on the assassination of Robert Kennedy. His feature documentary \"RFK Must Die\" is the first theatrical documentary on the case since Ted Charach's \"The Second Gun\" which was released in October 1973. His book on the case, \"Who Killed Bobby? The Unsolved Murder of Robert F. Kennedy\" was published by Union Square Press to coincide with the fortieth anniversary of the assassination on 5 June 2008. His second feature documentary Children of the Revolution tells the stories of Ulrike Meinhof and Fusako Shigenobu, leaders of the German Red Army Faction and the Japanese Red Army, and premiered at IDFA in 2010. It was released in thirty cinemas across Japan in 2014. His third feature Killing Oswald was released in 2013, on the fiftieth anniversary of the JFK assassination. His most recent book Dirty Tricks: Nixon, Watergate and the CIA was published in 2018 by Skyhorse Publishing.",
"Death or Canada Death or Canada is a two-part Canadian–Irish docudrama which was broadcast in Ireland on RTÉ One in November/December 2008. In the UK on The History Channel UK in January and February 2009 as Fleeing The Famine. The film was also featured as part of the celebrations for Toronto's 175th anniversary. Narrated by Brian Dennehy, the film follows the Protestant Willis family from the west of Ireland as they flee to Canada in the Spring of 1847 at the height of the Great Famine, ultimately arriving in Toronto, The story is intercut with commentary from historians and other experts. It was directed by Ruán Magan. The title of the film comes from the research of one of the main contributors, Mark McGowan, Principal of St. Michael's College, University of Toronto. He says that \"The title, \"Death or Canada\", was something that I discovered in archives in Limerick, Ireland, in a newspaper where the locals were writing about the choices that had to be made in 1847. They said: 'During the Cromwellian period, it was to hell or Connaught, and now that's being writ large in our own time as death or Canada.' \" Set in early 1847, it follows the doomed Willis family, who were forced to leave their home in southwest Ireland to set out on a journey to Canada. The Willis' are Protestant and demonstrate that it wasn't only Catholics who were victims of the Great Famine. Professor Peter Gray of Queen's University Belfast opines: \"People think that Irish Catholics have the monopoly on famine suffering, when in fact it crossed the religious divide. 30% of those who went to Canada were Protestant.\" The episode investigates the impact of the Famine on North America. In summer 1847, Toronto, then a small city in the British colony of Canada, was swamped by an influx of 40,000 famine refugees from Ireland. Toronto's Bishop Michael Power, who following a visit to Ireland in 1847, endeavoured to warn the City Council of the human tsunami of Irish that were about to arrive on its shores. The programme follows the archaeological excavations recently undertaken by Toronto-based Archaeological Services Inc., on the site of the future headquarters of the Toronto International Film Festival, to find the remains of the so-called \"fever sheds\" in which emaciated immigrants were treated or died.",
"Belt of the Celts Belt of the Celts is the ninth album by Irish folk and rebel band The Wolfe Tones. The album features political songs such as \"Some Say the Devil is Dead\"",
"Do or Die (serial) Do or Die is a 1921 American film serial directed by J. P. McGowan. The film is considered to be lost. The film serial had a working title of \"The Seal of Satan\". Several of its scenes where filmed at the Morro Castle in Havana, Cuba.",
"The Execution of Mary Stuart The Execution of Mary Stuart is a short film produced in 1895. The film depicts the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots. It is the first known film to use special effects, specifically the stop trick. The 18-second-long film was produced by Thomas Edison and directed by Alfred Clark and may have been the first film in history to use trained actors, as well as the first to use editing for the purposes of special effects. The film shows a blindfolded Mary (played by Mr. Robert L. Thomae, male actor in Shakespeare-Tradition also for female cast) being led to the execution block. The executioner raises his axe and an edit occurs during which the actor is replaced by a mannequin. The mannequin's head is chopped off and the executioner holds it in the air as the film ends. This film is in the public domain.",
"The Second Death The Second Death is a 2000 Irish short film written and directed by John Michael McDonagh, and starring Liam Cunningham. The film is McDonagh's film debut as both writer and director. James Mangan (Liam Cunningham), a middle-aged alcoholic, returns from his local pub when he hears a voice from his past and comes to realise he is doomed. Cunningham, Fairley, and Gillen would all later star together in \"Game of Thrones\".",
"Declan Mulholland Thomas Declan Mulholland (6 December 1932 – 29 June 1999) was an Northern Irish character actor of film and television. He is known for his multiple appearances in \"Doctor Who\" and for his deleted portrayal of Jabba the Hutt in \"Star Wars\". Born in Belfast, he had his first film role in \"H.M.S. Defiant\" (1962) as Morrison. He had a substantial part in the 1974 Amicus Productions film \"The Land That Time Forgot\". He also played a human version of Jabba the Hutt in a deleted scene of the original \"Star Wars\" (1977). The scene was reinserted for the film's twentieth anniversary re-release in 1997, with Mulholland replaced by a CGI Jabba as he appears in \"Return of the Jedi\". His many TV appearances included the \"Doctor Who\" stories \"The Sea Devils\" (1972) and \"The Androids of Tara\" (1978), \"The Bill\", \"The Onedin Line\" and \"Quatermass\". Mulholland died of a heart attack on 29 June 1999, aged 66."
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[
"Fatal Termination"
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Are director of film Close To My Heart and director of film Jayam Manade from the same country?
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Jayam Manade (1986 film) Jayam Manade () is a 1986 Indian Telugu-language action drama film written by Paruchuri Brothers and directed by K. Bapayya. The film stars Krishna, Sridevi and Rao Gopal Rao, and was released on 10 April 1986. The soundtrack album comprising 5 songs was composed by Chakravarthy. Veturi Sundararama Murthy penned the lyrics.
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"Prasanna Jayakody Prasanna Jayakody (In Sinhalese: ප්රසන්න ජයකොඩි) is a Sri Lankan film director and screenwriter, internationally recognized for his cinematic accomplishments in contemporary Sri Lankan cinema. His movies primarily explore the human state of mind. They are fusions of human emotions, senses and thoughts set against the fractured socio-economic, cultural and religious environments of Sri Lanka. In the global context, Jayakody’s cinema represents the psycho-biological realities of mankind and arbitrariness of human cognition juxtaposed against the larger concept of civilization. Jayakody’s eccentric cinematic world, in the absence of a flowing story, capitalizes on subtle but detailed images and intense characters. Jayakody, born on 25 August 1968, in Horana, embarked on a journey of artistic expression with his excellent skills in painting. He gained his first international award from the government of Japan, winning an Art competition while he was still at school. Art, being the base of his visual reading, Jayakody cherishes the memory of drawing cover page vectors for his late father Jayasena Jayakody; a celebrated, award-winning author who has showcased three State Literary Awards in the Best Sinhala Novel category. He completed his education from Taxila Central College, Horana. Following a series of short dramas, Jayakody stunned the structured traditional Sri Lankan theater in 1993 with his debut \"Sevenali Saha Minissu\" (Shadows and Men), an absurd drama which dealt with the complexities of the human condition, and realities of life. It won the gifted young dramatist, 21 years of age at the time, the Best Stage Drama award in the State Drama Festival in Sri Lanka that year. After challenging the conventional Sri Lankan theater, Jayakody then turned to excel in the Sri Lankan Television Drama genre with his exceptional works of art; \"Nisala Vila\" (The Still Pond) in 1999, \"Imadiyamankada\" (At the Crossing) in 2000, \"Sanda Amawakayi\" (The Moon Eclipsed) in 2002, and \"Hada Vila Sakmana\" in 2003. These dramas secured several state awards, including the Best Tele Drama of the Year. Jayakody’s \"Awasana Horawa\" (The Final Hour) in 1998 won the Best Young Director award at the \"Sumathi Tele Awards\".",
"Kiran Hegde Kiran Hegde (born December 5, 1981) is an Indian film director, writer and producer who works in Kannada films. Hegde is known for his psychological Crime Thriller work - Manaroopa. Kiran was a communications professional in Bangalore prior he got into film making. Manaroopa is his debut work. In an interview given to The Hindu, Kiran expressed his thought of film making that he is in no hurry to make films immediately as he felt that his style of film making may not be liked by mass audience. He stated that he does films to express his thoughts and can afford to wait for the right time and story. Best Debut Director award at 10th Dada Saheb Phalke Film Festival 2020, New Delhi.",
"Manasutho Manasutho is a 2002 Indian Telugu-language romantic film directed by A. S. Ravi Kumar Chowdary and produced by Venigalla Ananda Prasad. It music and background score were by Ashirwad. The film stars Akash, Arzoo Govitrikar. Manasutho is romantic drama concerning the relationship between Kanshik and Sapna.",
"Manas Mukherjee Manas Mukherjee (also known as Manas Mukharji; 9th September 1943—16th October 1986) was an Indian composer who composed several albums in Hindi. He was the son of Jahar Mukherjee, a Thumri singer, composer, lyricist and a film producer based in Kolkata, West Bengal. Mukherjee was also the father of two well known Indian singers, Shaan and Sagarika. He died on 16th October 1986.",
"Close to Us Close to Us () is a 1958 Soviet drama film directed by Adolf Bergunker. The engineer together with the journalist went to the plant in Altai after studying at the institute and are confident in their future. At the factory, they are faced with a turner Milovidov, over-fulfilling the plan, thanks to an artificially created situation. Friends decide to expose this person.",
"P.S. Arjun P.S. Arjun (born 19 November 1982) is an Indian film director and writer who works in Tamil cinema. He is directing a Tamil musical Psychological thriller film titled Amutha with Sriya Sree in the lead and Anees Shaz, Levin Simon Joseph, Ashna Sudheer and Shivakumar Raju in important characters. Arjun worked with Infosys BPO, Bangalore as an HR professional and ING Vysya Insurance, Chennai as an Operation Executive before leaving to pursue his dream of becoming a movie director. His love for Tamil movies sprouted after watching movies like Roja and Gentleman. His interest on movies became serious after watching Kannathil Muthamittal.",
"Babu Nanthankode Babu Nanthankode is a South Indian film director who works mainly in the Malayalam film industry. Born in Thiruvananthapuram, India, Babu Nanthankode displayed a storyteller's potential from an early age. He is known for his realistic and sensitive portrayal of village life in his movies.",
"Vidi Bilu Vidi Bilu (Hebrew: וידי בילו; born 6 January 1959) is an Israeli film director. Vidi Bilu was born in Jerusalem in 1959. She studied between 1983 and 1985 at the photography department of Hadassah College. She began to study cinema in 1986, at the School of Beit Zvi, and specialised in direction in 1989. The director of many publicity films, and at the same time, editor and producer, she has directed many films, such as \"Close to Home\" in 2005.",
"Arike Arike (\"So Close\") is a 2012 Malayalam romantic comedy film by Shyamaprasad, starring Dileep, Samvrutha Sunil and Mamta Mohandas. The film, based on a Bengali short story by Sunil Gangopadhyay, was produced under the banner of Picture Perfect and has a script by Shyamaprasad, cinematography by Alagappan, editing by Vinod Sukumaran and music by Ouseppachan. The film, a romantic comedy, is about the shades of love that vary in a relationship woven around three individuals. The film tells the story of Shanthanu (Dileep), a researcher in linguistics, and his two friends, Kalpana (Samvritha) and Anuradha (Mamtha). Anuradha is the sensitive type who has gone through certain bitter experiences in her teenage years, when her cousin Balu (Vineeth) approached her with love, which she later realised was just his lust for her. Kalpana is slightly capricious and loves being in love. Anuradha wants to play Cupid and bring Shanthanu and Kalpana together; she knows that they care a lot for each other, but for some reason or other are hesitant to take the next step. Kalpana's parents are against her marrying Shanthanu and they try to bring proposals from their own (Brahmin) community. At one point Kalpana's aunt tricks her into meeting a guy, Sanjay, whom they hope Kalpana will like and marry. While they travel with Sanjay in his car, they meet with an accident, which causes some scars on Kalpana's face and gave her a disfigured toe. After the accident Kalpana backs out from the relationship with Shanthanu and gives in to her parents' wishes to marry Sanjay. Anuradha feels very bad for Shanthanu and tries to console him. It is then that Shanthanu realizes that Kalpana had actually not loved him at all. Though his actual love was near him, so close, he failed to recognise it (Where the name of this film gets significance). Shyamaprasad has adapted several classics on celluloid so far. \"Arike\" is the latest in that list and is based on a Bengali short story by Sunil Gangopadhyay, whose novel was also the base for the director's \"Ore Kadal\".",
"Laura Mañá Laura Mañá (born January 12, 1968, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain) is an actress, film director and screenwriter. As an actress, she has worked for directors such as Bigas Luna or Vicente Aranda. In 1997 she directed \"Paraules\", her first short film and in 2000 her first feature film, \"Sexo por compassion\", selected at the Sundance and Toronto film festivals and awarded at the Malaga Film Festival (Best Film and Audience Award) and at the Festival de Miami (Best Screenplay), among others."
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[
"no"
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Which film has the director who was born later, Karyam Nissaram or Confessions Of Felix Krull (Film)?
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Karyam Nissaram Karyam Nissaram () is a 1983 Family Drama Malayalam film written and directed by Balachandra Menon, starring Prem Nazir and Lakshmi, along with Balachandra Menon, Poornima Jayaram, Sukumari, Jalaja, Lalu Alex, Baiju and K. P. Ummer. The music was composed by Kannur Rajan. It gives us a glimpse into a Malayali family during the period when their children marry off. It is mainly focusing on marriage and the fact the problems in marriage are caused by simple matters which, individuals due to their ego and other problems, make into huge problems. All family problems can be overcome. The film was a blockbuster of 1983. The film has musical score by Johnson and songs by Kannur Rajan. The film was remade in Kannada as "En Swamy Aliyandire" starring Tiger Prabhakar and Jayashri, in Tamil as "Maappillai Sir" starring Visu, Mohan, Rekha and Jayanthi and in Telugu as "Pellam Chatu Mogudu" starring Dasari Narayana Rao. The film deals with the small family of Unnithan and Ammini Kutty and their two daughters Parvathi and Sarala. Unnithan is an advocate, but he does not practice law due to his principles. Lekshmi is from a rich family and proud of it. They had a love marriage and now he is a henpecked husband. Sarala falls in love with her Lecturer and marries him. Balachandra Menon has a workshop and a driving school. Parvathi goes to his driving school to study driving and falls in love with him. Ammini Kutty opposes their love, but they decided to live together. Unnithan approves, but Ammini Kutty initially can't accept her daughter's decision. Avarachan, as Nasir's neighbour is an ex-service man who lives with his wife Annie. They are extremely depressed because they have no children. Suddenly Biju appears as Avarachan's illegitimate son, but no one except Unnithan knows it. News of becoming a grandmother brings Ammini Kutty back to Parvathi. Avarachan dies one day. Ammini Kutty become suspicious that Biju is Unnithan's son. This breaks their relationship and they separate.
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"Nirnayam (2013 film) Nirnayam is a 2013 Indian Tamil drama film written and directed by Srisaravanan and produced by music composer V. Selvaganesh. The film features Vikram Anand, Regina Cassandra and Baby Vedhika in the lead roles, with Saranya and Harris Moosa playing other pivotal characters. The film opened to mixed reviews upon release on 18 October 2013. The film was initially titled as \"Thaedel\" and was announced as a joint production venture of music composer V. Selvaganesh and director Saravanan in June 2012. The audio of \"Nirnayam\" was held at Satyam Cinemas in Chennai on 14 February 2013 with the soundtrack being released by Vikku Vinayakram and received by director K. S. Ravikumar. The film opened to mixed reviews from critics. A critic from the Times of India noted \"The plot also goes haywire towards the end when Mukund's secret is discovered, and the climax is logically shaky.\" The New Indian Express noted \"It was a knot with potential. But if only it had more consistency in its feel, and was crisper in its narration.\"",
"Nirav Shah Nirav Shah (born 16 November 1974) is an Indian cinematographer. He has worked on a number of major box office hits in Tamil, Hindi and Malayalam since his debut with the 2004 Hindi film \"Paisa Vasool\". After having worked as an assistant to other noted cinematographers and solely on many television advertisements, music videos and short films, Nirav Shah became an independent cinematographer for a \"full feature film\", debuting with the 2004 Bollywood film \"Paisa Vasool\", following which he worked on another Hindi project \"Intequam\" (2004). It was, however, the Hindi blockbuster film \"Dhoom\" (2004) that made people take notice of Shah, winning him accolades and gaining him fame and popularity. Subsequently, Shah got offers from the Tamil film industry as well and moved southwards, debuting in Kollywood with the 2005 Linguswamy-directed action film \"Sandakozhi\", following which he was called up by director Vishnuvardhan. They first teamed up for the 2005 Tamil gangster film \"Pattiyal\", following which Vishnuvardhan worked together with Shah for all his following feature films, creating, along with noted music composer, Yuvan Shankar Raja, one of the most acclaimed and most successful collaborations in the Tamil film industry. Shah's works in Vishnuvardhan's films including \"Arinthum Ariyamalum\" (2005), \"Billa\" (2007) and the most recent \"Sarvam\" (2008) got high praise and much critical acclaim, turning him into one of the most sought-after young cinematographers in Kollywood. He returned to Bollywood to work on the films \"Banaras\" and the sequel of \"Dhoom\" (both 2006), for which Shah again won accolades and also received several awards and nominations, particular for the latter one. He was signed up by Prabhu Deva for the Vijay-starrer \"Pokkiri\" (2007) and by the director-duo Pushkar-Gayathri for their debut venture \"Oram Po\" (2007). In 2008 then, Nirav Shah was called by noted filmmaker Shankar to handle the camera for his forthcoming magnum opus science-fiction film \"Enthiran\", but Shah had to reject the invitation because he had already given his word to his friend Vishnuvardhan's \"Sarvam\".",
"Nirakazhcha Nirakazhcha is a 2010 Malayalam film directed by debutant Anish J. Karrinad starring Italian actor Vincenzo Bocciarelli, Mamta Mohandas and Manoj K. Jayan in the lead roles. \"Nirakazhcha\" tells the story of an Italian painter who visits Kerala to recreate the magnificent Raja Ravi Varma paintings. The makers of the film claim that it is an Indo - Italian production that is expected to promote the tourism and culture of both Kerala and Italy. Accordingly, the film has been shot on some of the most scenic spots in Kerala, and would also feature the spectacular landscape of Italy. The film is expected to have a global release and would reportedly be dubbed into Tamil, Hindi, Telugu, Kannada, Spanish, Russian, German, Arabic and Italian as well.",
"Sudhinam Sudhinam is a 1994 Malayalam film written by Babu Janardhanan and directed by Nissar.",
"Kalyana Kurimanam Kalyana Kurimanam is a 2005 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Udaya Kumar and produced by S. Kumar. The film stars Abbas, Vijayaraghavan and Nandana in lead roles. The film had musical score by Ronnie R. Raphel. The music was composed by Ronnie R. Raphel.",
"Karyam Nissaram (TV series) Karyam Nissaram was an Indian Malayalam-language comedy drama serial written and directed by Unni Cherian. This serial started airing from 1 October 2012 on Kairali TV and concluded with a total of 1104 episodes. Karyam Nissaram was the longest running serial on Kairali TV. The show tells the story of husband and wife, Mohanakrishnan (Aneesh Ravi) and Sathyabhama (Anu Joseph). Mohanakrishnan is an honest, punctual and disciplined Village Officer and Sathyabhama is a smart, bold and independent Lawyer by profession. Each day a different theme is taken up and solved. Both the husband and wife have a strong opinion on any social or familial issue. The difference of opinion between them and how they take it all in the ride forms the major theme of the serial. The serial, in a very humorous tone, takes up socially relevant issues and presents the two extreme view points. The husband, a very strong believer of the values of Gandhi and the wife, a very modern woman, their opinions on issues are never the same. The serial, in fact, shows how differences of opinion need not be a negative element in the married life and how one can find humour in all these situations.",
"Divyadarshan Divyadarshan (born 26 October 1986) is an actor and Producer from Kerala, India. Divyadarshan made his debut in Malayalam through the movie \"Hide n' Seek\" in 2012 and has acted in eight movies since then. Divyadarshan was born in Pattathanam Kollam, Kerala as the only son of actor E. A. Rajendran and Sandhya Rajendran. He is the grandson of theater artist and writer O. Madhavan and Vijayakumari, who is also an actress. He is also the nephew of actor Mukesh. The actor made his entry into the Malayalam cinema industry in a lead role through Anil's \"Hide n' Seek\", which was also his home production. He also acted in the movies \"Mr. Bean\", \"Teens\" and \"Kootathil Oral\". In 2014, Divyadarshan played the lead in Jahangir Shams's \"Karanavar\". The actor will be seen in Anil Radhakrishnan Menon's upcoming movie \"Lord Livingstone 7000 Kandi\", a comical fantasy film.",
"Theevram Theevram () is a Malayalam-language crime thriller film written and directed by Roopesh Peethambaran in his directorial debut, and starring Dulquer Salmaan, Shikha Nair, Sreenivasan, Vinay Forrt, Vishnu Raghav, Riya Saira and Anu Mohan. The film is produced by V.C Ismayil under the banner of VCI Movies and features music composed by Roby Abraham, while cinematography is handled by Hari Nair and the editing by Kapil Gopalakrishnan. Distribution of the film is done by Lal Jose under the banner of LJ Films. Audiography was done by M. R. Rajakrishnan. The film has two plots, one set in the present and the other about five years back. It is about the outburst of a young man towards the legal system. The film was released on 16 November 2012. The film was dubbed into Tamil as \"Aaththiram\" in August 2016 and under the same original title in Hindi in 2017. The movie opens with a crime where a young man is beaten to death with a club in front of his fiancé. Then comes an investigation officer Alexander, and an assistant Ramachandran. Though Alexander is intelligent enough to prove crimes unlike he doesn't believe in torturing the accused people to prove crimes. Parallel to this, Harsha Vardhan, a man of mystery, lives lonely in a big house, and teaches music to a girl named Sophie. He one day kidnaps and brings an auto driver and tortures him in his house cellar. Alex and Ramachandran take up the case, and upon investigation, Alex suspects Harsha. He kills the auto driver, severs his body and then eradicates every single piece of evidence which proved him guilty. Once the severed parts are found, the case heats up further, and Alex realizes that it's a well planned murder, only after he finds Harsha had left the city without any notice. The story then moves four years back. Harsha, as an aspiring young musician, struggles not only in his career, but also in his life to maintain his relationship with his lover Maya. After getting married, both of them, with their two more friends, Nimmy and Dr. Roy, start living together. One day, Maya joins a call center and gets miffed with a driver on his careless driving.",
"Raghunath Paleri Raghunath Paleri (born 7 February 1954) is an Indian novelist, screenwriter, director and actor from Kerala. He has directed three films\"Onnu Muthal Poojyam Vare\" (1986), \"Vismayam\" (1998), and \"Kanneerinu Madhuram\" (unreleased); and in television, eight episodes of \"Bible Ki Kahaniya\" (1993–1995). He entered Malayalam film industry in 1978 and have also worked in Tamil film industry. His elder brother Dr. Prabakaran Paleri served as the 16th Director General of Indian Coast Guard from 28 Feb 2006 to 31 August 2006. His debut work with the producer Nirmal of Minerva Studio did not release at that time. Later Nirmal produced another film \"Naseema\" which got released in 1983 was written by Paleri. He found his way in acting as Adruman, a blind man, in \"Thottappan\" directed by Shanavas K. Bhavakutty. Raghunath Paleri has authored several books in Malayalam language. His published works include:",
"Pathirakalam Pathirakalam (English: Nocturnal Times) is a 2018 Indian Malayalam-language film directed by Priyanandanan and starring Mythili. The film is about the dark and violent activities that happen in society today. The plot begins with finding Hussain who is a renowned researcher at Berlin University of the Arts and the father of Jahanara, the main protagonist. Hussain has missing for the past three months and there has been no follow-up on the missing case by the local police or judiciaries. Jahanara decides to take things into her own hands and, with her friend Mahesh, Jahanara sets out to find her father. The story follows Jahanara's journey and the difficulties and problems she encounters."
] |
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[
"Karyam Nissaram"
] |
Which film has the director who died later, Tractor Drivers or Ebb Tide (1922 Film)?
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Ebb Tide (1937 film) Ebb Tide is a 1937 American Technicolor adventure film directed by James P. Hogan and starring Oscar Homolka, Frances Farmer and Ray Milland. Much of the film is set in the South Seas and is based on the 1894 novel "The Ebb-Tide" by Robert Louis Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne. The novel was previously filmed as 1922 Paramount silent film "Ebb Tide", and it was filmed again in 1947 as "Adventure Island", produced by William H. Pine and William C. Thomas. In 1890, three Westerners stranded on a tropical island in the South Pacific get an offer to captain a cargo boat. Paramount had previously filmed the story in 1922. In March 1937 they announced they would film the story again under the title of "With the Tide" starring Frances Farmer, and produced by Lucien Hubbard. Lloyd Osborne was writing the script and Hubbard wanted Henry Hathaway to direct. Paramount were going to make the film as one of its two color movies for the season. By April Paramount had decided to revert to the story's original title and Ray Milland had joined the cast with Hathaway to direct. Then Oscar Homolka, at the time best known for playing a role in "Rhodes of Africa", signed a four-year contract with Paramount and was given a lead role in "Ebb Tide". Barry Fitzgerald and Lloyd Nolan rounded out the main cast. Henry Hathaway was delayed on shooting "Souls at Sea" so he was replaced as director by James Hogan. Filming started June 1937. Island scenes were shot at a specially-constructed village on Catalina Island. Over one hundred Polynesians were used. The film was shot in color at a time when that was rare. Paramount took up Farmer's option after she made the film.
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[
"Running Water (film) Running Water is a 1922 British silent drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Madge Stuart, Lawford Davidson and Julian Royce. The film is an adaptation of A.E.W. Mason's 1906 novel \"Running Water\".",
"Driving Force (1921 film) Driving Force () is a 1921 German silent film directed by Zoltán Nagy and starring Lya De Putti and Fern Andra. It premiered at the Marmorhaus in Berlin. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Hans Jacoby and .",
"Sea tractor A sea tractor is a motor vehicle designed to travel through shallow seawater, carrying passengers on a platform elevated above a submerged chassis. The sea tractor was most popular during the early 1930s, as a unique way to give scenic tours to patrons of waterfront hotels and resorts. In other applications, sea tractors were used simply as a ferry through shallow waters. The use of sea tractors has declined since, as boats, ferries, and other aquatic vessels often serve the same function much more efficiently and comfortably. The hotel at Burgh Island operates a sea tractor, to carry hotel guests and other visitors the to the island at high tide, when the causeway connecting the island to the Devon mainland is submerged. The current tractor is the third one to be used at this location. A sea tractor is also used at South Sands Beach near Salcombe, Devon. The beach has no jetty or pier, and the South Sands Ferry therefore cannot reach dry land to pick up passengers. The sea tractor transports passengers to the ferry waiting a few metres out to sea. The United States Army Corps of Engineers operates a three-wheeled sea tractor called the Coastal Research Amphibious Buggy (CRAB). This vehicle consists of a wheeled tripod supporting an operating platform above ground level. It can move at on land and at a somewhat slower speed in water. It was built for scientific research on beach nourishment. Ballybunion Sea and Cliff Rescue, based at Ballybunion in the west of Ireland, operates a specially-constructed, tracked sea-tractor, used for launching and recovering the group's Atlantic 75-class lifeboat. Sea tractors have been featured on the famous child's TV Show \"Teletubbies\". The Burgh Island sea tractor also appears as the method of transport between the mainland and the island in the 1941 Agatha Christie novel \"Evil Under the Sun\". As a result, it also appears in the \"Evil Under the Sun\" (2001) episode of ITV's \"Agatha Christie's Poirot\" TV series, and features prominently in the 2007 adventure game \"\", both of which were adapted from the novel. In the game, the player can use a phone on the beach to summon the tractor to transport Poirot from the island to the village on the mainland. The second Burgh Island sea tractor features in the 1965 Dave Clark Five film \"Catch Us If You Can\" (1965).",
"Stormflower Stormflower is a 1922 British silent film directed by Bert Wynne and written by Anne Merwin. A man's wife dies. He unknowingly adopts his own daughter, and later rejects her when she weds an officer who dies in the war.",
"Out with the Tide Out with the Tide is a 1928 American silent drama film directed by Charles Hutchison and starring Dorothy Dwan, Cullen Landis and Crauford Kent.",
"Time and Tide (1916 film) Time and Tide is a 1916 American short drama film directed by B. Reeves Eason.",
"Shore Leave (1925 film) Shore Leave is a 1925 American silent comedy film directed by John S. Robertson and starring Richard Barthelmess and Dorothy Mackaill. It was produced by Barthelmess's production company, Inspiration, and released by First National Pictures. \"Shore Leave\" is based on the stage play of the same name written by Hubert Osborne. The play ran on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre from August 8 to December 1922 for a total of 151 performances. The play starred James Rennie and Frances Starr in the leads played by Barthelmess and Mackaill in the film. A print of \"Shore Leave\" is in a private collection.",
"Shifting Sands (1922 film) Shifting Sands is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Fred LeRoy Granville and starring Peggy Hyland, Louis Willoughby and Valia.",
"The Farmer Takes a Wife (1953 film) The Farmer Takes a Wife is a 1953 Technicolor musical comedy film starring Betty Grable and Dale Robertson. The picture is a remake of the 1935 film of the same name which starred Janet Gaynor and Henry Fonda. Grable and Dale Robertson first appeared together in the movie \"Call Me Mister\" (1951). During the 19th century, where Molly Larkins (Betty Grable), the girlfriend of rough-and-tumble canal-boat captain Jotham Klore (John Carroll) she hires mild-mannered farmer Daniel Harrow (Dale Robertson) to work on the boat. Molly and Dan fall in love and marry. Harold Arlen & Dorothy Fields composed the following songs for the movie: \"The Farmer Takes a Wife\" was presented on \"Best Plays\" June 28, 1953. The one-hour adaptation starred John Forsythe and Joan Lorring.",
"The Green Caravan The Green Caravan is a 1922 British silent drama film directed by Edwin J. Collins and starring Catherine Calvert, Gregory Scott and Valia."
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[
"Tractor Drivers"
] |
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