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"blessed event" Definitions
  1. the birth of a baby

42 Sentences With "blessed event"

How to use blessed event in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "blessed event" and check conjugation/comparative form for "blessed event". Mastering all the usages of "blessed event" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The stars were only partially aligned for this blessed event.
Of course, such a blessed event deserves a seriously adorable photo shoot.
Their blessed event The singer had been outspoken about her desire to have children.
The camera doesn't seem to catch Simmons or Locken's other least-favorite Housewife, Brandi Redmond, anywhere near the blessed event.
For in this satire of mainstreamed queerness, presented by New Light Theater Project, two different couples anticipate a blessed event.
But the blessed event they were hoping for doesn't come to pass, and their Kevin turns purple and appears to drown.
Her lyrics teem with the multitude of feelings that the blessed event stirred up: excitement, anxiety, nostalgia, sometimes all at once.
There was only one little change: The officiant and more than 200 "guests" witnessed the blessed event on a video call.
Think about what this means to you; perhaps invite your parents or stream the blessed event to an audience of loved ones.
While Anana is in mommy mode, we assume the cubs' proud papa, 28-year-old Nanuq, is busy handing out cigars following the blessed event.
The new retrospective of Walter Robinson's bright, brushy realist paintings is a blessed event for fans of the storied bohemian artist, art journalist, and man-about-downtown.
As the couple are royal, their friends, family, and principalities can't exactly give them a diaper tree and a gift card to Target to celebrate the blessed event.
Fans of 2212s comedies about fast-talking journalists won't want to miss this screening of "Blessed Event," adapted from a stage play produced in the wake of the success of "The Front Page" and starring Lee Tracy as a Walter Winchell-esque columnist.
There are World War I uniforms worn by the Smith students who went where the Red Cross would not; gingham sports ensembles, including shirt, skirt and shorts, from the late 1930s; 1940s maternity tops with a label that reads "Blessed Event"; a nun's habit from the 1960s that was taken apart every year so the pieces could be washed and then resewn; Diane von Furstenberg wrap dresses from the 1970s; and stewardess uniforms from multiple airlines in the 1980s.
Chorist's dam Choir Mistress was unraced daughter of the Yorkshire Oaks runner-up Blessed Event and produced several other winners as a broodmare. Blessed Event was a daughter of the Preis der Diana winner Friedrichsruh.
Scimitarra had started 5/2 favourite but sustained a career-ending injury in the last quarter mile. Later in June she was sent to Ireland for the Pretty Polly Stakes over ten furlongs at the Curragh. Racing on soft ground for the first time she recorded her first major success, beating the Barry Hills-trained Blessed Event by a head with the pair finishing well clear of the opposition. Bint Pasha faced Blessed Event again in the Yorkshire Oaks over one and a half miles at York Racecourse on 18 August.
He made his film debut as a singing bandleader in Blessed Event."Dick Powell." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers Vol. 3. (2000) Gale, Detroit He was borrowed by Fox Film to support Will Rogers in Too Busy to Work (1932).
Jewell's film debut came in Blessed Event (1932). She had been brought to Hollywood by Warner Brothers for the film version of Up Pops the Devil. Jewell gained other supporting roles, appearing in a variety of films in the early 1930s.
Blondie's Blessed Event is a 1942 black-and-white comedy film directed by Frank R. Strayer and starring Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake, and Larry Simms. It is the 11th of the Blondie films. It was the first to feature the character of Cookie.
Alvin Roberts (Lee Tracy) feuds with Bunny Harmon (Dick Powell), a singer. Roberts reports on society people who are expecting a "blessed event", i.e. going to have a child. One such report antagonizes a gangster in a delicate situation, who sends over a henchman to threaten him.
Montreal Gazette, February 26, 1999. Maman Last Call,"A blessed event, after all". Montreal Gazette, February 11, 2005. Paul à Québec"Matters of life and death; Paul a Quebec, the beloved bande dessinee, comes alive on the big screen with a portrait of a family touched by cancer".
Three Tails started favourite on 5/2 after winning the Lancashire Oaks with Bourbon Girl (who had finished second to Unite in the Irish Oaks) the second choice at 3/1. Bint Pasha and Blessed Event were next in the betting on 5/1 whilst the other runners were Eurobird (later to win the Irish St Leger), Island Lake (third in the Lancashire Oaks), Shining Water, Known Line and Debach Delight. Quinn tracked the leaders before sending the filly into the lead three furlongs out. Bint Pasha held off a sustained challenge from Blessed Event to win by one and a half lengths with a gap of six lengths back to Bourbon Girl in third.
Blessed Event is a 1932 American pre-Code comedy-drama film directed by Roy Del Ruth and starring Lee Tracy as a newspaper gossip columnist who becomes entangled with a gangster. The Tracy character (Alvin Roberts) was reportedly patterned after Walter Winchell, famous gossip columnist of the era. The film was Dick Powell's film debut.
His Broadway credits include The Backslapper (1925), The Sea Woman (1925), Paid (1925), Saturday's Children (1927), The Royal Family (1927), See Naples and Die (1929), Apron Strings (1930), Up Pops the Devil (1930), A Modern Virgin (1931), Here Goes the Bride (1931), Blessed Event (1932), There's Always Juliet (1932), and Message for Margaret (1947).
Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event is a 1943 American comedy film directed by Leslie Goodwins and written by Charles E. Roberts and Dane Lussier. It is the sequel to the 1942 film Mexican Spitfire's Elephant. The film stars Lupe Vélez, Leon Errol, Walter Reed, Elisabeth Risdon, Lydia Bilbrook and Hugh Beaumont. The film was released on July 17, 1943, by RKO Pictures.
In 1943, the final film in the Spitfire series, Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event, was released. By that time, the novelty of the series had begun to wane. Vélez co-starred with Eddie Albert in a 1943 romantic comedy, Ladies' Day, about an actress and a baseball player. In 1944, Vélez returned to Mexico to star in an adaptation of Émile Zola's novel Nana, which was well-received.
According to a 1960 Services Labor Report, the kitchen and dining room employees working in the Stork Club did "not enjoy the same wages, hours and working conditions" as the others, a primary factor which led the majority of them to the strike in January 1957. Besides the Cub Room, the Main Dining Room, and the bar, the club contained a room for parties, the "Blessed Event Room", a large private room on the second floor with its own kitchen and bar, the "Loner's Room", which was just past the Cub Room and much like a men's club, and a private barber shop. When the Blessed Event Room was added to the Stork Club, its walls were entirely mirrored. Patrons who had rented the room for poker parties complained that the mirrors allowed players to see everyone's hand of cards; the mirrors were then removed from the walls.
Offender profiler Frank Black (Lance Henriksen), a member of the private investigative organisation Millennium Group, is sent to San Francisco to track down a doomsday cult which murders its brainwashed members when they disobey it. "Gehenna" sees both Carter and Nutter continue their roles from "Pilot", although it also necessitated changes in filming locations. The episode opens with a quote from W. H. Auden's poem "Blessed Event"—the first of the series' opening quotations—and makes references to the Hebrew Bible's Gehenna.
Born in Shoshoni, Wyoming, on July 19, 1907, Jewell was the daughter of Emory Lee Jewell and Livia A. Willoughby Jewell. Her father was "a prominent ... doctor and medical researcher." She was educated at St. Mary's Academy in Minnesota and at Hamilton College in Kentucky. After years in theater stock companies, including an 87-week stint in Lincoln, Nebraska, she hit the big time after getting a part on Broadway in Up Pops the Devil (1930). She received glowing critical reviews for Blessed Event (1932) as well.
Postcard illustrating the "Blessed Event" room for private parties. From the physical layout of the club, as described by Ed Sullivan in a 1939 column, the Stork should have been doomed to failure, since it was strangely shaped and far from roomy in places. The club's ladies' room was on the second floor of the structure and the men's room was on the third; only the dining room, bar, and later the Cub Room were on the first floor. Despite this, the club could hold 1,000 guests.
The McLennan Handicap was an American thoroughbred horse race run annually each February from 1934-1961 at Hialeah Park Race Track in Hialeah, Florida. First run in 1934 as the Joseph McLennan Memorial Handicap, the race was named In honor of the late Joseph "Sandy" McLennan, the former racing secretary at Hialeah Park and at Chicago's Arlington Park who died in December 1933.Ottawa Citizen, December 22, 1933 In winning the first edition in 1934, Col. Edward R. Bradley's Blessed Event equaled the world record for a mile and an eighth on dirt.
He was captured in North Africa while serving with the Italian Army. As a prisoner of war in a camp in Pennsylvania, he used his drawing skills to create designs and sculptures. He met his future wife, Angela D'Oro, after having seen her perform on piano for POWs. He returned to the United States to marry D'Oro after he was released following the conclusion of World War II. He and his wife bought a large Victorian-style home in Closter using the royalties he earned from a doll called "Blessed Event" that was acquired from him by the Ideal Toy Company.
In October, 1986, a census report showed 377 adults living at the community.This is confirmed by the New Vrindaban offering in the 1986 Srila Prabhupada Vyasa-puja book—"Sri Vyasa-puja 1986: The Most Blessed Event, August 28, 1986, The Appearance Day of Our Beloved Spiritual Master His Divine Grace Om Visnupada Paramahamsa Parivrajakacarya Astottara-sata Sri Srimad A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Founder-Acarya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness"—which listed the names of each resident of the community. Disciples of Srila Prabhupada: 104 men, 66 women; Granddisciples: 99 men, 91 women; Varnasrama College: 17; Children 212. This was probably the year of greatest population for the community.
Tom Shales of The Washington Post praised "Gary and Tony", calling it "an intimate and affecting portrait of what happens when partners in a same-sex marriage set out to secure for themselves a blessed event, the limits of biology notwithstanding".CNN documentary 'Gary and Tony' takes big-hearted look at gay parenthood LGBT- interest website AfterElton.com reviewer Michael Jensen echoed this accolade, applauding the show for focusing on the couples' relationship and their desire for a child and less on their gay activism. Jensen did question whether the episode should have explored the moral issues of surrogacy versus adoption more than it did.
338 On occasion Brown and Carney appeared in the same film but not together (Mexican Spitfire's Blessed Event, Vacation in Reno). For 1961's The Absent-Minded Professor, they were listed in promotional material as "the comedy team of Brown and Carney" as though it was designed as a comeback, but they shared no scenes. After the team's split, Brown continued working in films and appeared on television shows such as I Married Joan, Wagon Train, and My Three Sons until his death in 1961. Brown had also been teamed with Tim Ryan in the Columbia Pictures short film French Fried Frolic in 1949, and with Jack Kirkwood in four RKO Pictures short films in 1950 and 1951.
His big break came when he replaced Spencer Tracy for three weeks in the Broadway play The Last Mile. Jenkins was called to Hollywood by Darryl F. Zanuck and signed first to Paramount Pictures and shortly afterward to Warner Bros. His first role in films came in 1931, when he appeared as an ex-convict in the short Straight and Narrow. He had originated the character of Frankie Wells in the Broadway production of Blessed Event and reprised the role in its film adaptation, both in 1932. With the advent of talking pictures, he made a career out of playing comic henchmen, stooges, policemen, taxi drivers, and other 'tough guys' in numerous films of the 1930s and 1940s, especially for Warner Bros.
The 24-performance run of The Common Sin was the only other play she did in 1928. The Ring Lardner and George S. Kaufman June Moon gave Patrick her longest run of her stage career, 273 performances in 1929 and 1930, and an additional 48 performances in 1933. She rounded out 1930 with the 13-performance run of Room of Dreams. Privilege Car was her first play of 1931, but she soon was on stage with George M. Cohan in the musical Friendship and finished out that year with 17 performances as Meg in Little Women One of the briefest plays of her career was The Girl Outside in 1932, which only ran for 8 performances; however, that one came on the heels of the very successful Blessed Event that had run for 115 performances.
In 1929, Tracy arrived in Hollywood, where he played the role of newspapermen in several films--but not the 1931 version of Front Page, as he was not deemed a big enough name at the time (Pat O'Brien got the part). His best role is generally considered that of Alvin Roberts, a Walter Winchell-type gossip columnist in Blessed Event (1932). He also starred as the columnist in Advice to the Lovelorn (1933), very loosely based on the novel Miss Lonelyhearts by Nathanael West; and a conscience-stricken editor in the 1943 drama Power of the Press, based on a story by former newspaperman Samuel Fuller. Tracy played "The Buzzard," the criminal who leads Liliom (Charles Farrell) into a fatal robbery, in the American film version of Liliom (1930).
On 13 September, Bint Pasha was sent to France and started favourite for the Prix Vermeille over 2400 metres at Longchamp Racecourse, a race which serves as a trial for the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. Three Tails and Blessed Event were again in opposition whilst the other runners included Teresa (the top three-year-old in Spain), Khariyda (later to win the E. P. Taylor Stakes and the Premio Lydia Tesio), River Memories (Prix Maurice de Nieuil, Prix de Pomone), Karmiska (Prix de la Nonette) and Swept Away (Prix Chloé). Ridden by Pat Eddery, she took the lead soon after the start and opened up a three length advantage entering the straight. She was never seriously challenged and won by two and a half lengths from Three Tails with the outsider Something True taking third ahead of Khariyda.
Georgy is a musical with a book by Tom Mankiewicz, lyrics by Carole Bayer, and music by George Fischoff. Based on the Margaret Forster novel Georgy Girl and the subsequent 1966 film adaptation, it tells the story of awkward, overweight, dowdy music teacher Georgy; her beautiful, self-centered roommate Meredith; Meredith's ne'er-do-well boyfriend Jos; and widower James Leamington, Georgy's father's wealthy employer, who has a lustful eye on the full-figured girl. When Meredith becomes pregnant, an overjoyed Georgy prepares for the blessed event, and soon after finds herself the baby's caregiver when the irresponsible Meredith disappears with a new beau. Georgy and Jos settle into an unlikely relationship threatened by his need to be independent, ultimately forcing Georgy to make a decision based on what's best for the child rather than her own needs and desires.
Genge, p. 22 and "The Judge".Genge, p. 34 The episode opens with a quote from the Anglo-American poet W. H. Auden, taken from the 1939 poem "Blessed Event"—"I smell blood and an era of prominent madmen", the final line of the poem's third stanza.Genge, p. 132 Poetry by William Butler Yeats, a contemporary of Auden's, formed a plot point in "Pilot",Genge, pp. 130–132 while the title of "Loin Like a Hunting Flame" was taken from the work of yet another contemporary, Dylan Thomas.Genge, pp 138–139 As "Pilot" did not open with a quotation, "Gehenna" is the first episode of Millennium to do so.Genge, p. 130 The episode's title, Gehenna, is the Hellenised form of the Hebrew Gehinnom, the "Valley of the Son of Hinnom". Gehinnom was a location referred to in the Hebrew Bible where children were sacrificed by burning to the Canaanite god Moloch; this ritual sacrifice echoes the cremation of the victims in the episode.Genge, pp.
That same year, he directed the first version of Dashiell Hammett's novel, The Maltese Falcon (1931). Ricardo Cortez portrayed the roguish private eye whose investigation of a murder case entwines him in a plot involving unsavory people searching for a fabled, jewel-encrusted falcon. While the plot somewhat mirrors the 1941 remake, this pre-Code version features sexual innuendo, including Bebe Daniels bathing in the nude, overt references to homosexuality and one instance of cursing. Del Ruth reunited with James Cagney for the crime drama Taxi! (1932) and then directed the comedy Blessed Event (1932) starring the fast-talking Lee Tracy. Del Ruth subsequently oversaw such pictures as The Little Giant (1933) starring Edward G. Robinson, Lady Killer (1933) with James Cagney, Bureau of Missing Persons (1933) featuring Bette Davis, Employees' Entrance (1933) with Warren William and Loretta Young, Upper World (1934) with Ginger Rogers, and the musical comedy Kid Millions (1934) starring Eddie Cantor.

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