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The Barstow School The Barstow School (commonly known simply as "Barstow"), founded in 1884The Barstow School at a Glance, accessed November 20, 2006 by Miss Mary Louise Barstow, is a nonsectarian, coeducational, private preparatory school located on State Line Road in suburban southern Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
The Bartlett The Bartlett is the Faculty of the Built Environment at University College London. University College London created the first chair of architecture in 1841, and the school is named after the original benefactor, Sir Herbert Bartlett.
The Bascom Affair The Bascom Affair is considered to be the key event in what triggered the quarter century long battles known as the Apache Wars. The incident took place in 1861 on what is now known as modern Arizona and New Mexico.
The Baseball 2003 The Baseball 2003: Battle Ballpark Sengen Perfect Play Pro Yakyuu is a baseball video game released only in Japan in 2003. The game features real time commentaries and bench reports, and the players have been animated using motion capture technology.
The Baseball Bunch The Baseball Bunch was a syndicated television show hosted by Baseball Hall of Famer Johnny Bench that ran from March 21, 1982 until January 1, 1985. The show ran thirty minutes and featured children chosen from the Tucson, Arizona Little League.
The Baseball Furies The Baseball Furies are a gang from the film The Warriors. The Baseball Furies Do quite a bit of walking and absolutely no talking, this outfit is a force to be reckoned with and seems to be fearless if not insane.
The Baseball Network The Baseball Network was a short-lived television joint venture involving the American Broadcasting Company (ABC), the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), and Major League Baseball. The Baseball Network only ran during the 1994 and 1995 seasons.
The Bash Street Kids The Bash Street Kids is a comic strip in the UK comic The Beano, and is often seen as representative of the comic, rivalling Dennis the Menace. The strip was created by Leo Baxendale under the title When the Bell Rings, and first appeared in The Beano in issue 604, dated 13 February 1954.
The Bash Street Kids Annual The Bash Street Kids Annual is the current name of the book that has been published yearly since 1979 to tie in with the children's comic The Beano, specifically The Bash Street Kids comic strip. As of 2005 there have been 22 editions, with another (The Bash Street Kids Annual 2007) to follow in 2006.
The Basic Principles of Relations Between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics The Basic Principles of Relations Between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was an agreement between the United States and the USSR written in May 1972. It was an agreement to regulate political behavior and how a country should act in foreign policy, and specified a code of conduct for the USSR and the US.
The Baskervilles The Baskervilles is an animated children's TV show about a British family living in the most twisted theme park in the world. The show was originally created by series co-director Nick Martinelli and series co-writer Alastair Swinnerton, and eventully distributed and co-financed by CINAR (now Cookie Jar Entertainment) and designed, produced and co-financed by Alphanim.
The Basketweave The Basketweave is the name of a stretch of Highway 401 in Ontario, Canada, immediately east of the Jane Street underpass in Toronto; the name derives from the interesting criss-crossing design of the roads, which evokes imagery of a straw basketweavethe westbound Highway 401 driver, the functional aspect of the Basketweave is to allow drivers in the express lane]s to change into the collector lanes, from which they can subsequently enter [[Highway 400 (Ontario)|Highway 400. The Basketweave also enables the reverse lane change (from collector to express), acting similar to an express-collector exchange site.
The Bassen Rift In Star Trek The Bassen Rift is a location in space, sector 1045 where the Battle of the Bassen Rift took place. The USS Enterprise-E had to pass through the Rift to rendezvous with Starfleet Battle Group Omega in sector 1045.
The Bat (1926 film) The Bat (1926) is a silent film based on the 1920 hit Broadway play by Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood, directed by Roland West and starring Jack Pickford and Louise Fazenda. The story takes place in an old mansion, where people look for hidden loot while a caped killer (nicknamed "The Bat") bumps them off.
The Bates Student The Bates Student is the student newspaper of Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. Established in 1873, the Student is the one of the oldest continuously-published college weeklies in the United States, and the oldest co-ed college weekly in the country.
The Bathers The subject of bathing women has been painted by artists from many different schools of art and at many times in history. Among these paintings, are two by nineteenth century French painters that have gained a great deal of significance under the same title.
The Batman Adventures Batman Adventures is a DC comic book series featuring Batman. It is different from other Batman titles in that it is set in the continuity (and style) of Batman: The Animated Series as opposed to the regular DC Universe.
The Batman/Superman Hour The Batman/Superman Hour was a Filmation animated series that was broadcast on CBS from 1968–1969. Premiering on September 14, 1968, this 60-minute program featured new adventures of the DC Comics superheroes Batman, Robin and Batgirl alongside shorts from The New Adventures of Superman and The Adventures of Superboy.
The Bats The Bats are an influential New Zealand rock band formed in 1982 in Christchurch by Paul Kean (bass), Malcolm Grant (drums), Robert Scott (guitar, vocals) and Kaye Woodward (vocals, other instruments). Though primarily a Christchurch band, The Bats have strong links to Dunedin and are usually grouped in with the Dunedin Sound bands that emerged from that southern city in the early 1980s.
The Batten Twins The Batten Twins are a professional wrestling tag team in World Championship Wrestling, National Wrestling Alliance and various other independent wrestling promotions comprised of real-life twins Bart Batten and Brad Batten.
The Battle (TNG episode) "The Battle" is a first season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, first broadcast November 16, 1987. It is episode #9, production #110, written by Herbert Wright, based on a story by Larry Forrester, and directed by Rob Bowman.
The Battle Box The Battle Box is the name of a historical location in Singapore that is now a tourist attraction managed by The Legends Fort Canning Park. It is a bunker located within Fort Canning, and was the headquarters of the British forces during the Battle of Singapore.
The Battle Hymn of the Republic "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" is a patriotic anthem, written by Julia Ward Howe, that was made popular during the American Civil War. The original words and music were written in 1853 by South Carolinian William Steffe.
The Battle Hymn of the Republic, Updated The Battle Hymn of the Republic, Updated (otherwise known as The Battle Hymn of the Republic (Brought Down to Date)) was written in 1901 by Mark Twain, as a parody of American imperialism, in the wake of the Philippine-American War. It is written in the same tune and cadence as the original Battle Hymn of the Republic.
The Battle of 40 The Battle of 40 (862-863) In 863 Muslim emirs attacked Armenia without hesitation but found a worthy opponent in the Armenian prince and his army. Prince Ashot Bagratouni went to battle with 40,000 men against the enemy army which consisted of 80,000 men, and still defeated them heavily on the shores of the Araxes.
The Battle of Anghiari (painting) The Battle of Anghiari {1505} is a lost painting by Leonardo da Vinci, which is still believed to be hidden somewhere in the Hall of Five Hundred (Salone dei Cinquecento) in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence. It is believed to depict a fierce battle between two men ensconced on raging horses.
The Battle of Broken Hill The Battle of Broken Hill was a mass killing which took place near Broken Hill on January 1, 1915. Two men described as Turks (but more likely to be Afghanis) shot dead four people and wounded seven more, before being killed by police and military officers.
The Battle of Du Preez's Farm The Battle of Du Preez Farm was a fictional battle featured in the ITV hit series Ultimate Force. The battle is fought between SAS Regulars and Civilian Volunteers against several hundred men from 5 Brigade of the Zimbabwe armed forces.
The Battle of Hamburg (book) The Battle of Hamburg (subtitled: The Firestorm Raid) is a book by the British military historian Martin Middlebrook describing the combined RAF Bomber Command and USAAF 8th Air Force attacks on the German city of Hamburg in the Summer of 1943.
The Battle of Hong Kong (film) The Battle of Hong Kong was the only film made in Hong Kong during the Japanese Occupation from 1941 to 1945 The film was produced by the Japanese Dai Nippon Film Company, was directed by Tanaka Shigeo] and featured an all-Japanese cast, but some Hong Kong film personalities were also involved in its making.
The Battle of China The Battle of China was the sixth film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight propaganda film series. It describes the modern history of China, with the founding of the Republic of China by Sun Yatsen, and leads on to the Japanese invasion.
The Battle of Midway A 1942 documentary film directed by Oscar-winning director John Ford. It is a montage of color footage of the Battle of Midway with voice overs of various narrators, including Donald Crisp, Henry Fonda and Jane Darwell.
The Battle of Milvian Bridge The Battle of the Milvian Bridge, or The Battle at Pons Milvius, is a fresco in one of the rooms that are now known as the Stanze di Raffaello, in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican. The Battle of Milvian Bridge, located in the Sala di Costantino ("Hall of Constantine"), is by Giulio Romano and other assistants of the Italian Renaissance artist Raphael, who died in 1520.
The Battle of Mogadishu The Battle of Mogadishu is a book by Matt Eversmann and Dan Schilling, along with Tim Wilkinson, Mike Kurth, Raleigh Cash, and John Belman, published in 2004. All the writers were Army Rangers and Air Force spec ops personnel in the task force involved in the Battle of Mogadishu.
The Battle of Ostia The Battle of Ostia is a painting by the workshop of the Italian renaissance artist Raphael. The painting was part of Raphael's commission to decorate the rooms that are now known as the Stanze di Raffaello, in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican.
The Battle of Passchendaele The Battle of Passchendaele in October and November 1917 was the last phase of an attack launched by the British Expeditionary Force on 31 July 1917. Its target was to push the Germans off the high ground surround the much-needed Belgian town of Ypres (which is now called Ieper) and would open the way for an advance that would have a significant strategic impact on the Western Front.
The Battle of Red Cliff (film) The Battle of Red Cliff () is the highly anticipated John Woo film based on the events of Three Kingdoms period, specifically the Battle of Red Cliffs, as portrayed in historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong, one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. The movie will be filmed in Hebei, China and is expected to be released sometime in late 2007 or early 2008, possibly being used to help promote the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.
The Battle of Russia The Battle of Russia was the fifth film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight propaganda film series. It is the longest film of the series, beginning with an overview of previous failed attempts to conquer Russia: by the Teutonic Knights in 1212 (footage from Sergei Eisenstein's film Alexander Nevsky is used here), by Charles XII of Sweden in 1704, by Napoleon I in 1812 and by Imperial Germany in World War I.
The Battle of the Century The Battle of the Century is a 1927 Hal Roach two-reeler starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, who, although just teamed, had yet to take on their recognisible Stan and Ollie characters on a more or less permanent basis. A young Lou Costello can be seen in an early scene as a member of the audience at the prize-fight mentioned in the film's title.
The Battle of the Kegs The Battle of the Kegs is a ballad written by Francis Hopkinson. It depicts January 6, 1778 during the American Revolution when a particular British fleet of ships terrorized the colonists and resided in Philadelphia's port.
The Battle of the Sexes The Battle of the Sexes was a nationally televised tennis match between Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King, held at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas, on September 20, 1973. Riggs was a master showman, sports hustler, and a 1940s tennis star who, for three years, had once been the World No.
The Battle of the Somme (film) The Battle of the Somme (1916) was a documentary and propaganda film made by British official cinematographers Geoffrey Malins and John McDowell during World War I. Though intended as patriotic propaganda, the film gave, for its time, a very graphic portrayal of trench warfare, showing dead and dying British and German soldiers.
The Battle of the Z Boys The Battle of the Z Boys was a boxing fight between Mexicans Carlos Zarate and Alfonso Zamora, who were, respectively, the WBC and WBA World Bantamweight titleholders. Held in Inglewood, California on April 23, 1977, the bout was not recognized as a unification fight by either of the sanctioning bodies without any specific reason given for withholding the sanction.
The Battle Over Citizen Kane The Battle Over Citizen Kane is a 1996 documentary chronicling the clash of billionaire newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst and actor-director Orson Welles over the film Citizen Kane and the events which led to the film nearly being destroyed.
The Battle-Road The Battle-Road is a vertically scrolling shoot 'em up racing arcade game released by Irem in 1984. The player controls a car that is armed with two kind guns (frontal and side), and drives for a road full of other dangerous vehicles like cars, motorcycles, trucks, helicopters.
The Battlefields Park The Battlefields Park includes the Plains of Abraham with Des Braves Park, both within Quebec City, and forms one of the few Canadian national urban parks. Its significance lies in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, the British victory over France, which decided the development of Canada.
The Battles of Coxinga The Battles of Coxinga (Kokusenya Kassen) is a puppet play by Chikamatsu. It was his most popular play: first staged on November 26, 1715, in Osaka, it ran for the next seventeen months, far longer than the usual few weeks or months.
The Baum Bugle The Baum Bugle: A Journal of Oz is the official journal of The International Wizard of Oz Club. The journal was founded in 1957, with its first issue released in June of that year (to a subscribers' list of sixteen).
The Baxter The Baxter is a 2005 film written and directed by Michael Showalter of Comedy Central's sitcom Stella. A "Baxter", as defined by the film, is the character in any romantic comedy that is dumped at the end of the story for the protagonist.
The Baxter Bulletin The Baxter Bulletin is the daily newspaper serving Mountain Home, Arkansas and Baxter County, Arkansas, and surrounding areas. It is the sole newspaper in Arkansas owned by Gannett, following a late 1991 sale by the company of the Little Rock-based Arkansas Gazette.
The Baxters The Baxters was a television sitcom, which debuted in 1977 on a local Boston, Massachusetts ABC affiliate, WCVB-TV. The program entered national syndication in 1979 after producer Norman Lear picked up the national rights.
The Bay (radio station) The Bay is a radio station owned by the CN Group broadcasting from the city of Lancaster to the region of North Lancashire and the South Lakes, in North West England. It takes its name from the sand banks of Morecambe Bay, above which the main 96.
The Bay Boy The Bay Boy was a highly-praised 1984 film based on director Daniel Petrie Jr’s semiautobiographical account of growing up in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia (a Canadian mining town in Cape Breton Island), during the Great Depression.
The Bélmez Faces The Bélmez Faces (also called The Faces of Bélmez) is considered by some parapsychologists the best-documented and "without doubt the most important paranormal phenomenon [in the 20th] century".http://www.
The Be Five The Be Five is a band composed of actors from the television show Babylon 5. It was masterminded by Bill Mumy and made up of Mumy, Andreas Katsulas, Mira Furlan, Peter Jurasik and Claudia Christian, with Patricia Tallman singing backup in two tracks.
The Be Good Tanyas The Be Good Tanyas are a Canadian traditional music group, whose influences include folk, country, and bluegrass. The style of music they perform is sometimes referred to as alt-country, but more often today as Americana.
The Beacon Foundation The Beacon Foundation is a non-profit charity in Pine Castle, Florida and a significant benefactor of Pine Castle Christian Academy. The foundation awards the Spirit of Leadership award yearly to those it deems "capture the heart of Pine Castle Christian Academy.
The Beacon School The Beacon School is a formerly Alternative-assessment, now "performance-based assessment" high school on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, near LaGuardia High School. The initial founding of Beacon in 1993 was intended as an alternative to the Regents exam-based testing system found in most New York City high schools, opting instead for portfolio-based assessment.
The Beach (film) The Beach is a 2000 film by the Trainspotting team of writer John Hodge and director Danny Boyle based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Alex Garland. It starred Leonardo DiCaprio, Tilda Swinton, Virginie Ledoyen and Guillaume Canet.
The Beach (novel) The Beach (1996) is a novel by Alex Garland about backpackers in Thailand. Influenced by the literary examples of Heart of Darkness and Lord of the Flies, it describes the adventures of a young Englishman in search of a legendary, idyllic beach untouched by tourism.
The Beach Boys solo discography Many solo albums have been released by members of The Beach Boys: Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson and Mike Love have all produced solo albums. Dennis Wilson was the first member to do so, with his 1977 album Pacific Ocean Blue.
The Beach Boys: An American Family The Beach Boys: An American Family is a 2000 television film written by Kirk Ellis and directed by Jeff Bleckner. It is a dramatization of the early years of The Beach Boys, from their formation in the early 1960s to their peak of popularity as musical innovators, through their late-60s decline (and Brian Wilson's beginning battle with mental illness), to their re-emergence in 1974 as a nostalgia and "goodtime" act.
The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell is an independently made dark comedy directed by Jonny Gillette, written and co-directed by Kevin Wheatley and produced by Jamie Bullock and Ryan Turi. The film stars Kevin Wheatley and Jamie Bullock, among others.
The Beaches The Beaches is an upper-middle class neighbourhood and popular tourist destination located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The trendy shops of Queen Street East lie at the heart of The Beaches community, with the boardwalk by the lake and several large parks being just a few steps south.
The Beak of the Finch The Beak of the Finch: A Story of Evolution in Our Time (ISBN 0-679-40003-6) is a Pulitzer Prize winning book on evolutionary biology written for the layperson by Jonathan Weiner in 1994. The finches of the title are the Galapagos or 'Darwin's Finches,' passerine songbirds in the Galapagos Islands.
The Bean Trees The Bean Trees, first published in 1988, is the first book written by Barbara Kingsolver, with a sequel Pigs in Heaven In this novel the protagonist, Taylor Greer, a native of Kentucky, finds herself in Oklahoma, near Cherokee territory. A woman leaves a Cherokee infant with Taylor, whom she later names Turtle, and the remainder of the novel traces their experiences together into Turtle's early childhood, along with a colorful cast of characters, including a Guatemalan couple.
The Beano Annual The Beano Annual is the current name of the book that has been published every year since 1939, to tie in with the children's comic The Beano. As of 2006 there have been 68 editions, with another (The Beano Annual 2008) to follow in 2007.
The Bear (film) The Bear, known as L'Ours in its original French release, is a film directed by acclaimed French director Jean-Jacques Annaud released theatrically in 1988. The screenplay is by Gérard Brach and it was adapted from the novel The Grizzly King by American author and conservationist James Oliver Curwood.
The Bear Growl The Bear Growl is a school newspaper at Mount Airy High School in Mount Airy, North Carolina. This student-run paper focuses on school issues as well as national news, entertainment, and local and national sports.
The Bear that Wasn't The Bear that Wasn't is a 1946 children's book by film director and Looney Tunes alumnus Frank Tashlin. In 1967, Tashlin's former Termite Terrace colleague Chuck Jones directed an animated short film based upon the book for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
The Bears (band) The Bears is an American band formed in 1985 in Cincinnati, Ohio, and continuing to create new music today. Its sound could be categorized as power pop, but draws from a diverse pallet of influences, and features the distinctive avant-garde guitar playing of Adrian Belew, the band's most prominent member.
The Beast (Homeworld) The Beast is the antagonist in Barking Dog Studios' Homeworld expansion set, Homeworld: Cataclysm, specifically an intelligent virus-like entity that creates grotesque living ships fashioned from hybridized organic and inorganic material.
The Beast and the Beauty The Beast and the Beauty (Yasuwa minyeo) is a 2005 South Korean romantic-comedy film. It involves voice-actor Dong-gun (Ryu Seung-beom), whose blind girlfriend Hae-ju (Shin Min-a) suddenly receives surgery to regain her eyesight.
The Beast from Haunted Cave The Beast from Haunted Cave is a 1959 horror/gangster/heist film directed by Monte Hellman and starring Michael Forrest, Frank Wolff, Richard Sinatra, and Sheila Carroll. Filmed in South Dakota, it tell the story of bank robbers fleeing in the snow who run afoul of a beast that feeds on humans.
The Beast in the Jungle The Beast in the Jungle is a 1903 novella by Henry James, first published as part of the collection, The Better Sort. Almost universally considered one of James' finest short narratives, this story treats appropriately universal themes: loneliness, fate, love and death.
The Beast Master The Beast Master is a science fiction novel by Grand Master Andre Norton, first published in 1959. It tells the story of Hosteen Storm, an ex-soldier who travels to a distant planet with his comrades, a group of genetically altered animals with whom he has empathic and telepathic connections.
The Beast with Two Backs The Beast With Two Backs is the seventh full-length studio album by British goth rock band Inkubus Sukkubus. It contains 12 original tracks and a cover of 'Can't Get You out of My Head' by Kylie Minogue with altered lyrics that more accurately reflect the band's aesthetics.
The Beat (television) The Beat was a short-lived UPN drama series which premiered on March 21, 2000 and ended after only six episodes a month later on April 25. Seven additional episodes were produced although they have never aired.
The Beat Circus The Beat Circus is a band which formed in 2002 out of a free improvisation ensemble and evolved into a dark cabaret band led by multi-instrumentalist / singer-songwriter Brian Carpenter. They describe their style as "Dark Carnival" music.
The Beat Club, Bremen The Beat Club, Bremen is a live album by the band King Crimson, released through the King Crimson Collectors' Club in February 1999 (see 1999 in music). It was recorded on the German programme Beat Club, in Bremen, Germany, on October 17, 1972.
The Beat Generation The Beat Generation is a 1959 film by MGM starring Steve Cochran and Mamie Van Doren, with Ray Danton, Fay Spain, Maggie Hayes, Jackie Coogan, Louis Armstrong, Cathy Crosby and Ray Anthony. It is a sensationalistic interpretation of the beatnik culture of the "beat generation" (and is sometimes considered one of the very last films noir to be produced.
The Beat That My Heart Skipped The Beat That My Heart Skipped (original French title: De battre mon cœur s'est arrêté) is a 2005 French film directed by Jacques Audiard and starring Romain Duris. The film premiered on February 17, 2005 at the Berlin Film Festival.
The Beatles bootlegs The Beatles are one of the most bootlegged bands in music history. Beatles bootleg records began showing up in the late 1960s, usually containing material that was illegally recorded, stolen or leaked from the band's record label EMI.
The Beatles Book The Beatles Book (also known as Beatles Monthly) was founded in 1963 by publisher Sean O’Mahony. It was first published in August 1963 and continued for 77 editions until it stopped publication after the December 1969 edition, by which time The Beatles had effectively ceased to exist.
The Beatles Box Set The Beatles' "Box Set" was the first complete set of original Beatles material released by EMI and Capitol in digital format. Released in 1988, for the first time a music fan could purchase the entire Beatles catalogue digitally formatted in a single set.
The Beatles play The Residents and The Residents play The Beatles The Beatles Play the Residents and the Residents Play the Beatles is a 1977 single by the Residents. The A-side, "Beyond the Valley of a Day in the Life", is a collage of Beatles recordings, with a looped clip of a Beatles Christmas record in which Paul McCartney says "Please everybody, if we haven't done everything we could have done we tried.
The Beatles trivia This article is about The Beatles, as it provides information—with numerous links to other pages—about the people who incorporated aspects of The Beatles music into their own work, worked with them, or who wanted to be associated with them.
The Beatles' 1965 USA Tour The Beatles staged their second concert tour of the United States (with one date in Canada) in the late summer of 1965. At the peak of American Beatlemania, they played a mixture of outdoor stadiums and indoor arenas, with two historic stops on this venture.
The Beatles' Christmas Album The Beatles' Christmas Album (USA) aka From Then To You (UK), was a 1970 compilation album of the Christmas records issued via The Beatles' Fan Club - and made available solely to members of their official fan clubs in the UK and USA. The Beatles' Christmas Album was issued as From Then To You in the UK by Apple Records (LYN 2154) and in the USA (SBC 100).
The Beatles' Long Tall Sally The Beatles' Long Tall Sally was The Beatles' final album released exclusively in Canada. After the release of this album, Beatles records in Canada would match the group's American releases, starting with the United Artists version of the A Hard Day's Night album, and, on Capitol, Something New.
The Beatnigs The Beatnigs was an early collaboration featuring Michael Franti and Rono Tse. The band's stage performance included the use of power tools such as a rotary saw on a metal bar to create industrial noise and pyrotechnics.
The Beats (record label) The Beats is the record label run by Mike Skinner and Ted Mayhem. Currently signed up to the label are hip hop duo The Mitchell Brothers, rapper Professor Green, rapper Example and his producer Rusher, and Skinner's own act The Streets.
The Beau Brummels The Beau Brummels was a successful 1960s American rock band, formed in San Francisco in 1963. Their sound was influenced by the Beatles and other British bands of the era, as well as by such American groups as the Kingston Trio and the Everly Brothers.
The Beautician and the Beast The Beautician and the Beast is a 1997 family comedy film directed by Ken Kwapis and starring Fran Drescher and Timothy Dalton as the title characters. The story follows the misadventures of a New York beautician who is (mistakenly) hired as the school teacher for the children of the president of a small Eastern European country.
The Beautiful The Beautiful was a New York City-based rock trio formed in 1988 from the remnants of the group Nasty Habits. The band comprised vocalist/guitarist Jonathan Lacey, bassist Perry Bottke and drummer Frank Ferrer.
The Beautiful Boy The Beautiful BoyDepending upon the edition the cover shows the title to be "The Boy" or "The Beautiful Boy", as do booksellers is a book, ISBN 0-8478-2586-8, by Germaine Greer, published in 2003. Its avowed intention was "to advance women's reclamation of their capacity for and right to visual pleasure".
The Beautiful Briny "The Beautiful Briny" is a song written by Robert and Richard Sherman for the 1971, Walt Disney musical film production Bedknobs and Broomsticks. David Tomlinson and Angela Lansbury perfom the song as a duet under the water, in the lagoon of the Island of Naboombu.
The Beautiful Country The Beautiful Country is a 2004 Vietnam-related drama film set in 1990. It is directed by Hans Petter Moland and starring Damien Nguyen, Nick Nolte, Bai Ling, Chau Thi Kim Xuan, Tim Roth, Anh Thu, Temuera Morrison and John Hussey.
The Beautiful Experience The Beautiful Experience is an EP by Prince (then known as ), his second commercial release under the moniker. The EP contained 7 mixes of the song "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World" in various formats, some with completely new vocals and/or instrumentation.
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