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103 Sentences With "show girl"

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

I was like, 'Stay home and watch the show, girl.
"Show Girl" starred Ruby Keeler and featured what should have been a can't-miss stunt.
Berlusconi's partner of the last five years is Francesca Pascale, a former television show girl 49 years his junior.
In 1989, she co-hosted the syndicated teen show Girl Talk before costarring in the teen soap opera Swan's Crossing .
By her own admission, this Las Vegas show girl can't sew, she can't act, she can't dance, and she certainly wasn't very funny.
On Sunday's episode of Yeh's Food Network show Girl Meets Farm, she takes viewers through a festive brunch for the Jewish New Year.
Now, it's a far cry from chia seeds and finely milled flour, but you should read Lily Burana on Longreads, on her youth as a peep-show girl in Times Square.
Rather, it took the place of the original Ziegfeld Theater, which dated to the high-kicking days of Florenz Ziegfeld's showgirls — and "Show Girl," a Gershwin musical that opened there in 1929.
O'Brien, 33, says that six minutes into the shoot, the security guards "got aggressive" with her and her photographer over her bikini, despite women in "comparable attire — show girl outfits" walking through the same area.
Stand-up comedian and star of MTV's show Girl Code Carly Aquilino appeared to share her first reaction to her former boyfriend's engagement to Ariana Grande on her Instagram story earlier this week, via a screenshot text conversation with a pal.
Most of the women I talked to "figured out" chewing and spitting on their own (one got the idea from the MTV comedy show Girl Code and another from an episode of Sex and the City), because they erroneously assumed that it would allow them to taste and enjoy food without any "negative" consequences.
Though the two were never very public about their romance, the stand-up comedian and star of MTV's show Girl Code appeared to share her reaction to her former boyfriend's engagement to Ariana Grande on her Instagram story when the news broke last year, posting a screenshot of a text conversation with a friend.
Ms. Blanchard, the 14-year-old star of the Disney Channel show "Girl Meets World," a coming-of-age sitcom about a group of friends in New York, had come to the East Coast to celebrate her involvement in a distinctly un-Disney production: "The Realest Real," a six-minute short film written and directed by Carrie Brownstein of "Portlandia" fame.
Many of his stories were adapted to movies during this period, including It's a Gift (1934) starring W.C. Fields. Introduction by Arthur Knight McEvoy also had a hit play, The Potters (1923), contributed to the Ziegfeld Follies and wrote a number of novels, including Show Girl (1928) and Hollywood Girl (1929). McEvoy's experiences working for the P. F. Volland Company are reflected in the Show Girl character of Denny Kerrigan, who was working for the Gleason Greeting Card Company. Show Girl and Hollywood Girl were adapted into the movies Show Girl (1928) and Show Girl in Hollywood (1930), both starring Alice White.
After this she performed steadily in vaudeville theatre and as a show girl.
A Runyonesque Roaring 20s musical comedy about a show girl who circumstance casts as an unlikely mob boss.
Sam Sidman (1871 - ) was an American actor. Born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, he appeared in films such as The Daring Years (a lost film released in 1923), The Show Girl (1927),"Show girl (Motion picture : 1927)", UCLA Film & Television Archive. and Better Days (1927). Sidman was also a well-known comedian, imitated by Eddie Cantor for example.
Four music videos were released from the album: "Beatsound Loverboy", "Show Girl", "Bloodshot Superstar" and "You Should Never Leave Me (Before I Die)".
Vogue Korea announced that Lee would introduce her new song through "Show Girl", a fashion music video of her recent photo shoot with the magazine on April 19, 2013. With the concept of a circus show girl, she donned several sexy outfits in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by abandoned circus sets and props. "Show Girl" was sequentially released on the first of May via Vogue Korea's iPad app, the magazine's website, and then its YouTube channel. According to Lee's agency, the background music for the video was titled "Show Show Show" (), which is a cover of Monrose's "No No No".
Natalia Stamuli (born January 13, 1996) is an Albanian fashion model, show girl and beauty pageant title holder, crowned Miss Earth Albania in 2013.
The Life Story of Abe the Newsboy, Hero of a Thousand Fights, Published by Abraham Hollandersky, Los Angeles, p. 388. Marion Nixon He wed actress Marion Nixon after moving to Hollywood around 1925. On July 5, 1929, having divorced Marion Nixon two years prior, he announced an engagement to New York show girl Agnes O'Laughlin."Joe Benjamin to Wed New York Show Girl," The Day, pg.
Show Girl is a 1928 American silent comedy-drama film starring Alice White and Donald Reed. It was based on the first of J. P. McEvoy's two Dixie Dugan novels, as was the 1929 musical. It was followed by a sequel, Show Girl in Hollywood (1930). While the film has no audible dialogue, it is accompanied by a Vitaphone sound-on-disc soundtrack with a musical score and sound effects.
Fabio Cannavaro, captain of the 2006 World Cup-winning Italian football team, was born in the district, along with his younger brother Paolo Cannavaro. Serena Autieri, italian actress and show-girl.
Molly of the Follies is a 1919 American comedy, silent black and white film directed by Edward Sloman. It is based on the story The Side-Show Girl by Peter Clark MacFarlane.
"show girl" was used as the television commercial for music.jp. "Your Love" was the promotional theme for Lixil Group's Tostem Group Home Finance. "Venus" was used to advertise Gillette's Venus Breeze razor.
Her screen debut was in The Sea Tiger (1927). Her early films included Show Girl (1928), which had Vitaphone musical accompaniment but no dialog, and its musical sequel Show Girl in Hollywood (1930), both released by Warner Brothers and both based on novels by J.P. McEvoy. In these two films, White appeared as Dixie Dugan. In October 1929, McAvoy started the comic strip Dixie Dugan with the character Dixie having a "helmet" hairstyle and appearance similar to actress Louise Brooks.
On 27 June 2007, Pancaro married the Italian former show-girl Vincenza Cacace, with whom he has two children: a son Riccardo, born in December 2005, and a daughter Virginia, born in January 2009.
Kapo has released two albums so far. She wrote and performed all of the songs on these albums. The albums are called Ditelindja e Diellit and I'm a Show Girl. Kapo's music is most popular among children.
The "Show Girl" music video was directed by director Adam J. Dunn. The video told a dark tale about a murderous groupie. Xavier announced that he was working on his "X. Marquis EP" with a late spring 2013 release.
Mizejewski, Linda. (1999) Ziegfeld Girl: Image and Icon in Culture and Cinema. Durham: Duke University Press, p. 95. Thus was invented the Show Girl, whose job, unlike the Chorus Girl, was simply to be beautiful and to model clothes.
Showgirl in Hollywood is a sequel to the 1928 Warner Bros. silent film Show Girl, which starred Alice White as Dixie Dugan. A French version of the film, titled Le masque d'Hollywood, was directed by Clarence G. Badger and John Daumery.
Show-girl (La Cocotte) at Scala Theatre, The Hague; by Isaac Israëls A showgirl is a female dancer or performer in a stage entertainment show intended to showcase the performer's physical attributes, typically by way of revealing clothing, toplessness, or nudity.
He married Hazel Forbes, show girl and Ziegfeld Girl, in March 1938, in Palm Springs, California. He and Forbes shared a sumptuous home in Beechhurst, Long Island. By 1942 Forbes was divorced from Richman. He then married Yvonne Day in 1943.
Show Girl is a musical by William Anthony McGuire that ran from Jul 2, 1929 to Oct 5, 1929. The show tells the story of aspiring Broadway showgirl Dixie Dugan (played by Ruby Keeler) as she is pursued by four suitors (played by Eddie Foy, Jr., Joseph Macaulay, Austin Fairman, and Frank McHugh). The music was written by George Gershwin, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn. The character of Dixie Dugan was created by J. P. McEvoy and was first introduced in Liberty (general interest magazine) before McEvoy published his 1928 novel Show Girl (on which the musical was loosely based).
He also orchestrated George Gershwin's one- act opera Blue Monday. With Will Marion Cook, he wrote the show Swing Along (1929). Vodery was an important influence on Duke Ellington. Also in 1929, Vodery, in his capacity as Ziegfeld's musical supervisor, recommended Ellington for Show Girl.
Keeler's husband, Al Jolson, frequently sat in the audience and serenaded her with the show's closing number, "Liza (All the Clouds'll Roll Away)," from his seat.Beyond Category: The Life and Genius of Duke Ellington by John Edward Hasse (), page 122 The song was featured in the 1946 biopic The Jolson Story.The Jolson Story at the Internet Movie Database In 1929, Ruby had to withdraw due to illness and Dorothy Stone took over the role. Warner Brothers filmed this musical as Show Girl (1928), (1928 film) with Alice White as Dixie Dugan; a sequel, Show Girl in Hollywood (1930) was made with White again starring as Dixie.
The music video takes place inside a boxing arena. Nick Lachey, the protagonist in the video, is the gentleman who is torn between two ladies. Nick is a boxer in the video, and his mistress is a show girl. His significant other is not in the video.
Born in Egypt, Pennsylvania, in 1911, Henley was the second of four children. She was trained as a dancer while growing up near Allentown, Pennsylvania, and eventually moved to New York City to appear in vaudeville. While in New York, Henley performed in Florenz Ziegfeld's "Show Girl".Brown, Dan.
Dave Gould (born Dezső Guttmann; March 11, 1899 - June 3, 1969) was a Hungarian-American choreographer and dance director. He is notable as one of the three people to win the short-lived Academy Award for Best Dance Direction. Gould married show girl Mitzi Haynes on April 18, 1937.
By this time, Dixie had long since left behind her origins as a show girl. In this wartime movie, Dixie gets a job working as a secretary in a government office. Her new boss has a romantic interests in Dixie, but she remains faithful to her fiancé, a defense plant worker.
Instead, he goes to a sex show and aggressively speaks to a peep show girl. The next day, Kinsky surprises Maddy in Central Park with flowers. After confronting her over her use of sleeping pills, he invites her to dine with him at his apartment. She admires his tattoo equipment and artwork.
That year, she had supporting roles on three shows: MTV's commentary show Girl Code; a hidden camera prank show Ladylike, also on MTV; and she was a series regular on the Fox show Party Over Here, a half-hour sketch comedy created by Paul Scheer and Lonely Island, which was cancelled after one season. As a commentator on the show Girl Code, she was described by Maitri Mehta at Bustle as a "beloved talking head"; Stephanie Merry at The Washington Post called Byer "one of the most dependably funny commentators" on the show. Byer has guest starred in several shows including BoJack Horseman, Transparent, and Bob's Burgers. She played Lizette in season 5, episode 7 of the Freeform series Young & Hungry in 2017.
After a brief output stage, the band that proved to be very professional on stage, offered four themes stood out where the fabulous "Show Girl", undoubtedly one of the singles of the debut album. And, outside of the program, the band eventually returned for a second "encore", ending the concert with the song "Loverboy Beatsound".
Punky Brewster aired for an additional two seasons, ending on May 27, 1988. Immediately upon Punky Brewster's end, Frye landed the lead role in the ABC sitcom pilot Cadets, which aired as a summer special on September 25, 1988. The pilot, however, was never picked up. In 1989, Frye hosted the syndicated weekly talk/variety show Girl Talk.
Worthing's professional acting debut came in What's in a Name?, soon after which she played in The Greenwich Village Follies of 1920 in New York. Following that production, she went to England to appear as "America's most Representative show girl" in a revue. She also performed in the 1921, 1922, and 1923 editions of Zigfeld Follies.
While doing Pantomime he also illustrated McEvoy's magazine serial, Show Girl."Dixie Dugan's Fathers", Modern Mechanix, April 1934. After work on The Potters, a feature by McEvoy, he moved to Woodstock, New York, in 1923 to study painting with Henry Lee McFee and Andrew Dasburg. He sometimes drew Woodstock into his strips as a town named Stoodwock.
On September 17, 2015, it was revealed that Sung-kyu would star in a new KBS series, Youth Express, alongside comedian Kim Sook and actor Park Jaemin. In June 2016, he hosted JTBC's variety show Girl Spirit with comedian Jo Se-ho. The program aired on July 19. In February 2017, he was confirmed as an MC for Channel A's variety show Singderella.
James T. O'Donohoe (1898 - 27 August 1928 in Los Angeles, California), born James Thomas Langton O'Donohoe, was a screenwriter in the early days of Hollywood, during the silent film era. His films include Kindred of the Dust (1922), The Lucky Lady (1926), What Price Glory? (1926), The Spaniard (1926), Two Arabian Knights (1927), Red Lips (1928), and Show Girl (1928).
In February 2016, it was reported that Spica would release a new mini-album in April 2016, but the album was delayed. Member Bo-hyung became one of the contestants on JTBC singing competition show Girl Spirit, that aims to highlight the main vocalists of lesser-known girl groups. The first episode premiered on July 19, 2016. She eventually won the competition.
Leaving the family stage company at age 17, McHugh went to Pittsburgh as leading man and stage manager at the Empire Theater there. He spent nine years in stock companies and road troupes before appearing on Broadway. McHugh debuted on Broadway in The Fall Guy, written by George Abbott and James Gleason in 1925. He also appeared in Show Girl (1929), a musical.
Armsby's personal life made the papers next year when, in March 1930, he announced that he was marrying, at age 54, a 36-year-old woman, Colette Touzeau, whom the N.Y. Times and other papers tartly (if apparently accurately) called an ex show-girl. They did marry that month, in Los Angeles, and remained together until Armsby's death twelve years later.
In 1929, the Gershwin brothers created Show Girl;. Retrieved August 22, 2011 The following year brought Girl Crazy,. Retrieved August 22, 2011 which introduced the standards "Embraceable You", debuted by Ginger Rogers, and "I Got Rhythm". 1931's Of Thee I Sing became the first musical comedy to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama; the winners were George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind, and Ira Gershwin."Drama".
His first wife was a secretary who left him after his drug use and his short stint in the hospital due to pneumonia. Banks said that she was constantly nagging him to settle down. Banks' second wife was a show girl, but the marriage quickly dissolved again due to the difference in salary. Banks earned around $40 a week and his wife $1000 a week.
Sweet's career faltered with the advent of talkies. Sweet made just three talking pictures, including her critically lauded performance in 1930's Show Girl in Hollywood, before retiring from the screen that same year and marrying stage actor Raymond Hackett in 1935. The marriage lasted until Hackett's death in 1958. Sweet spent the remainder of her performing career in radio and in secondary Broadway stage roles.
Her break came when she was 19 years old, when she was cast as a Ziegfeld girl in the Broadway production, Ziegfeld Follies of 1925. For the remainder of the decade she worked constantly for Florenz Ziegfeld, appearing in three more of his productions in featured roles, including a major role in the musical comedy, Rio Rita, which starred the comedy duo of Wheeler and Woolsey. Curiously, when Wheeler and Woolsey reprised their stage roles in a very successful 1929 film of the same name, Francis was not cast in the film, most likely because she was one of the stars in the Broadway production of Show Girl, which also starred Jimmy Durante, Eddie Foy, Jr., and Ruby Keeler. While appearing in Show Girl, talent scouts from Fox Film saw her song and dance ability and signed her to a contract, intending for her to appear in musicals.
Pham is a Judge on the TLC TV show Girl Starter, executive produced by Al Roker, and Co-Host of the show The Positive Pushback from Jonathan Faulhaber, Veteran Producer and Director of The View. Pham is the Co-Producer of Girlfriend (2010 film), which premiered at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival and won the 2011 Gotham Awards Audience Award.Tiffany Pham on IMDB. Imdb.com. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
The duo co-wrote the track "Boomerang" on Jana Kramer's late 2015 album Thirty One. The album's third single, "Shut Up and Fish" released to country radio on November 2, 2015. The album's fourth single, "Sierra", was released to country radio in 2016. Maddie and Tae guest-starred on the Disney Channel show Girl Meets World in an episode entitled "Girl Meets Texas, Part 2", which premiered on October 17, 2015.
Singer served in WWII, fighting a number of exhibitions for the soldiers. He was stationed at Camp Upton in New York but received a medical discharge due to eye trouble. He married the former show girl, Billy Boze in 1947. Having earned around a quarter million from boxing in his lifetime, Singer tried various businesses in his thirties and forties including sales, restaurants, real estate, and theater, owning several Cabarets.
Dorothy’s Broadway debut was in 1923 in Jerome Kern’s “Stepping Stones” with her father, Fred Stone. She was a big hit in the show. The New York Times reports that the audience was cheering her before the first act was over.New York Times, November 7, 1923, p. 14 Dorothy performed with her father again at the Globe Theater in Manhattan, in Criss Cross in October 1926. This was followed by “Three Cheers” in 1928 (with Will Rogers taking her father’s place because of an airplane accident). The headline of the review by Brooks Atkinson in the New York Times read “Dorothy Stone Captivates as Dancer and Singer.” New York Times, October 16, 1928, p. 16 In August, 1929, when Ruby Keeler (Al Jolson’s wife) had to withdraw due to illness from the cast of Ziegfeld’s “Show Girl”, Dorothy took over to headlines that read “Dorothy Stone scores a hit on ‘Show Girl’ . . .
He later went on to compete at the 1932 Olympic Games, again riding on the event and jumping teams. He finished 4th individually on the ex- racehorse Pleasant Smiles, despite a fall on cross-country, and the team was able to clinch the first gold medal the American equestrian team had seen. In the jumping competition, Chamberlin rode the Thoroughbred Show Girl over a notoriously difficult course, and went away with the individual silver medal.
10 Kerker was married twice: first to Rose Keene whose stage name was Rose Leighton (married 1884) and second to Mattie B. Rivenberg (June 5, 1908), a show girl in the musical Nearly a Hero who was 30 years his junior. There are no children listed on the 1920 census. Kerker died following an "attack of apoplexy" at his home on 565 West 169th Street in New York City at the age of 66.
The film was considered a lost film, with only the Vitaphone soundtrack still in existence. However, a print was discovered in an Italian film archive in 2015. SHOW GIRL (1928) LOST ALICE WHITE FEATURE FOUND! - Turner Classics Movies A restored version, with the original Vitaphone soundtrack synched to the print, screened at New York's Film Forum on October 25, 2016, marking the first time the film was publicly exhibited in 88 years.
150px Beginning in October 1929, writer McEvoy and Striebel teamed to produce a daily newspaper comic strip, syndicated by the McNaught Syndicate. The name of the strip was originally Show Girl but changed to Dixie Dugan on December 23, 1929. As time went by, the strip dropped the show business aspect, and Dixie became a career girl pursuing a more wholesome variety of jobs. The stories varied from romance and comedy to crime and suspense.
Dixie Dugan first appeared in two slightly risqué novels written by J. P. McEvoy, serialized in 1928-29 in the pages of Liberty. McEvoy's novels were then published in book form by Simon & Schuster as Show Girl (1928) and Hollywood Girl (1929). In the first story, Dixie begins as a Broadway chorus girl, and in the second she moves to Hollywood. The stories combine romance, glamour and a bit of scandal as Dixie pursues a career in show business.
Both novels were quickly adapted to movies, both starring Alice White as Dixie Dugan and both produced by Warner Bros.: Show Girl (1928) and Showgirl in Hollywood (1930). The first film featured music and sound effects using the Vitaphone sound-on-disc system, while the second film was a talkie using the early Western Electric sound-on-film system. In 1943, Twentieth Century Fox produced another film titled Dixie Dugan featuring Lois Andrews as the title character.
It was a modified version of the Tropicana show, and ran for six weeks with fair success. Her nightclub career became inspirations for films, documentaries, and a musical album. 20th Century Fox Records recorded "The House of Love" for an album entitled Jayne Mansfield Busts Up Las Vegas in 1962. She played the roles of burlesque entertainer Midnight Franklin in Too Hot to Handle (1960) and Las Vegas show girl Tawni Downs in The Las Vegas Hillbillys (1966).
Blasi was to be replaced by the Swedish show-girl Filippa Lagerback. Instead her last episode of "CD:Live" was broadcast on 4 June with her showing a curvier silhouette and she introduced the girl who would play her role: Giorgia Palmas. In 2006 she was the co-host of 56th Sanremo Music Festival with Giorgio Panariello and Victoria Cabello. Still in 2006 she hosted the edition of Festivalbar with "Il Mago Forest" (Forest the magician alias Michele Foresta) and Cristina Chiabotto.
They played the opening show "Girl Night" and the show at Capitol Lake Park. From their first shows, Bratmobile were considered an exciting and important addition to the fertile early '90s NorthWest scene. Between 1991 and 1994 Bratmobile released an album, Pottymouth, and an EP, The Real Janelle, on Kill Rock Stars, as well as The Peel Session recording before the intense media scrutiny and inner pressures of the Riot Grrrl movement hastened the band's breakup (on stage) in 1994.
Formerly a member of the Servants, Haines created the Auteurs with his then-girlfriend Alice Readman on bass guitar, former classmate Glenn Collins on drums, and later added James Banbury on cello. The demo tape and gig led to the band gaining a recording contract with Hut. Their first single "Show Girl" was praised by the British music magazine, Melody Maker, and the album, New Wave (1993), was nominated for a Mercury Music Prize. The Auteurs later became associated with the Britpop movement.
Dancing Time was a bay mare, bred by her owner William Tatem, 1st Baron Glanely. She was the first of two classic winners sired by Colombo an outstanding two-year-old who went on to win the 2000 Guineas in 1934. Dancing Time was the third of four foals produced by her dam Show Girl, a high-class staying racemare who won the Northumberland Plate in 1930. Show Girl's dam Comedy Star was a half-sister to The Derby winner Call Boy.
The show was well-received, earning a nomination at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival for the "Best Newcomer" award. Her 2007 show, "Show Girl", was inspired by Kylie Minogue and involved Hooper juxtaposing ideas of Minogue as dignified and ladylike with her own failed attempts to maintain dignity. In 2008, she returned to the Melbourne International Comedy Festival to perform a new solo show, "Storybook". In addition to her live comedy shows, Hooper has made numerous appearances on Australian radio and television since 2005.
Moulin Rouge is an American Pre-Code musical film released on January 19, 1934 by United Artists, starring Constance Bennett and Franchot Tone. It contained the songs "Coffee in the Morning and Kisses in the Night", and "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" with music by Harry Warren and lyrics by Al Dubin. Lucille Ball appears in an uncredited role as a show girl in the film.Moulin Rouge (1934) full cast and credits at IMDB It has no relation to any other films of/with the same name.
Thomas made his film debut in 1915 in The Money Master, but performed mostly on the Broadway stage, appearing in nearly 40 plays and musicals. He appeared as the Starkeeper in the original Broadway production of Carousel and also had Broadway roles in Kiss and Tell, Abe Lincoln in Illinois, Show Girl, and We, the People."Calvin L. Thomas, Actor, Dies at 79," Obituary, The New York Times, 1964. In 1927 he performed with Margaret Mosier in Junk, and they soon married; she died in 1951.
Throughout the 1920s, Kahn continued to contribute to Broadway scores such as Holka Polka (1925), Kitty's Kisses (1926), Artists and Models (1927), Whoopee! (1928), and Show Girl (1929). He went on to write song lyrics for several movies, primarily for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. By 1933, Kahn had become a full-time motion picture songwriter, contributing to movies such as Flying Down to Rio, Thanks a Million, Kid Millions, A Day at the Races, Everybody Sing, One Night of Love, Three Smart Girls, Let's Sing Again, San Francisco, Naughty Marietta, and Ziegfeld Girl.
In 1971, she appeared in the ill-fated musical about premature ejaculation, Maybe That's Your Problem."Elaine Paige: 'Every lead role I went for up until Evita I didn't get'", interview by Rosanna Greenstreet, The Guardian, 17 September 2016 She also appeared as an urchin in the West End's Oliver! Over the next decade, she played roles in various musicals, including Jesus Christ Superstar; Nuts; Grease, in which she played the lead role of Sandy from 1973 to 1974; Billy, from 1974 to 1975 playing Rita;Barber, Lynn. Show girl.
Winton was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1905. During the 1920s, she began her stage career as a dancer with the Ziegfeld Follies. After coming to the West Coast, Winton became known as "the green-eyed goddess of Hollywood". Her film appearances include roles in Tomorrow's Love (1925), Why Girls Go Back Home (1926), Sunrise (1927), The Crystal Cup (1927), The Fair Co-Ed (1927), Burning Daylight (1928), Melody of Love (1928), and The Patsy (1928), Scandal (1929), Show Girl in Hollywood (1929), The Furies (1930), and Hell's Angels (1930).
"Liza (All the Clouds'll Roll Away)" is a song composed by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn. It was introduced in 1929 by Ruby Keeler (as Dixie Dugan) in Florenz Ziegfeld's musical Show Girl. The stage performances were accompanied by the Duke Ellington Orchestra. On the show's opening night in Boston on June 25, 1929, Keeler's husband and popular singer Al Jolson suddenly stood up from his seat in the third row and sang a chorus of the song, much to the surprise of the audience and Gershwin himself.
Paula Edwardes in 1907, in costume for Princess Beggar She had a part in The Belle of New York (1897), which traveled to London; her sister Peggy Edwardes was also in the company. She was also in The Great Ruby. Her Broadway appearances included roles in A Runaway Girl (1898–1899); The Show Girl (1902); The Defender (1902); Winsome Winnie (1903); The Man from Now (1906); and The Princess Beggar (1907).Frank Cullen, Florence Hackman, Donald McNeilly, eds. Vaudeville Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performances in America, Psychology Press (2007): 283.
In New York, both are unable to find vacant hotel rooms, but Joan calls her friend, Peg Martin (Penny Singleton), whose baseball player husband is serving on a submarine, for a place to stay. Peg shares her apartment with Mac (Marie Wilson), a show girl who has just returned from entertaining the troops. A number of military men drop in on the apartment as Joan arrives, all invited by the scatter-brained Mac. Jim learns where Joan is staying, shows up too, and sees opportunity in the situation.
"Beatsound Loverboy" was part of the soundtrack of the 5th season of the Portuguese soap opera Morangos com Açúcar (Slimmy played this song in the last episode) and "You Should Never Leave Me (Before I Die") was part of the soundtrack of the 6th season of the same soap opera. "Showgirl" and the song "Bloodshot Star" are part of the soundtrack of the Portuguese TV series "Rebelde Way". Four music videos were released from the album: "Beatsound Loverboy", "Show Girl", "Bloodshot Superstar" and "You Should Never Leave Me (Before I Die)". To promote his album, Slimmy embarked on the "Sex and Love Tour".
"Show Girl", also written by Slimmy and produced by Quico Serrano and Mark Turner, was released to MySpace as the second single of the album on the same day "Beatsound Loverboy" was released and was released as a digital single on May 26, 2008. It premiered on the Antena 3 radio station on the same day. The song entered at number 44 on the Portugal Singles Top 50 where it stayed for one week and peaked at number 44 where it stayed for more one week. "You Should Never Leave Me (Before I Die)" was unveiled as the album's third and final single.
The necessity of staying within range of still microphones meant that actors also often had to limit their movements unnaturally. Show Girl in Hollywood (1930), from First National Pictures (which Warner Bros. had taken control of thanks to its profitable adventure into sound), gives a behind-the-scenes look at some of the techniques involved in shooting early talkies. Several of the fundamental problems caused by the transition to sound were soon solved with new camera casings, known as "blimps", designed to suppress noise and boom microphones that could be held just out of frame and moved with the actors.
The video, directed by Max & Dania was shot entirely in black and white, tells the story of Dixon breaking up with her husband, and her trying to regain composure and forget about it. She is seen entering a quiet café, upon leaving she takes off her coat revealing a show-girl outfit and leaves behind her wedding ring, then walks down a busy Las Vegas street. Meanwhile, Dixon is seen dancing alone in studio. The video ends with her entering the stage door of a show with an Elvis impersonator and two other show-girls stood outside.
Walter Thornton's agency favored "wholesome girl-back-home type" models as opposed to his competition who tended to hire models that fell into the "glamorous show-girl type". pin-up girl. Many of his agency's pin-up girl photos were sent to G.I.s under General Powell during World War II.Paul Dickson, War Slang: American Fighting Words, p. 198, Aug 1, 2014 The popularity of Thornton's pin-up girls led to charting singles such "Get a Pin- Up Girl!" by Don Wolf, "Pin-Up Polka" by Al Gamse and Irving Fields, and "The Walter Thornton Rumba" also by Gamse and Fields.
Several women were perceived as exemplars of the gold digger stereotype by the public. The best known gold digger of the early 20th century was Peggy Hopkins Joyce. Joyce was a former show girl who married and divorced millionaires. She was characterized as a gold digger during her divorce battle with Stanley Joyce during the early 1920s. Some have argued that she was the real-life inspiration for Lorelei Lee, the protagonist in Anita Loos’ 1925 gold digger novel Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and some have contended that the term gold digger was coined to describe her.
Many of these society luminaries, as well as the elite of the entertainment and fashion industries, have allowed W into their homes for the magazine's W House Tours feature, including Marc Jacobs, Sir Evelyn Rothschild and Imelda Marcos. In 2011, Steven Meisel created controversy again by promoting fake advertisements throughout the November issue of the magazine. In 2013, Meisel shot RuPaul's Drag Race Season 3 contestant Carmen Carrera in an editorial called "Show girl", promoting the beauty of the transgender model. In June 2019, Sara Moonves was named as the first ever female editor- in-chief in the magazine's history.
Clark is a veteran of the Vietnam War, having served as a first lieutenant in the United States Army with the 5th Infantry Division. He has been cast in numerous Adam Sandler films including The Waterboy, Little Nicky, Mr. Deeds, Eight Crazy Nights, 50 First Dates, I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry, Bedtime Stories, Grown Ups, and That's My Boy. He has also appeared in numerous television guest appearances, including Home Improvement, Boy Meets World, The Jamie Foxx Show, The Drew Carey Show, Girl Meets World, and Community. He was also Fred the chauffeur in Remington Steele.
Before her comedy career, Pascoe was a tour guide in London. Pascoe has appeared in many television programmes and panel shows, including Stand Up for the Week, The Thick of It, Mock the Week, The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret, Campus, Being Human, Twenty Twelve, QI, Have I Got News For You, Would I Lie to You, Hypothetical, and W1A as well as all-female sketch show Girl Friday (part of Channel 4's Comedy Showcase), which she co-wrote. Pascoe began performing stand up comedy in 2007. In August 2010, she performed her first show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Sara Pascoe Vs Her Ego.
In addition to the themed items, many members spend the year creating special throws which are shared with each other at the Lundi Gras party. The crowds love beads and throws and the members have fun giving them away. KOE Theme Medallions were first created in 2004 with the Pink Cadillac. The Show Girl followed in 2005. In 2006 the KOE Pops the Big Top was a prized catch and the 2007 throw of "KOE Shakes its Booty on the 7 Seas" The 2008 theme "The West Is History" celebrated the KOE's 10th Anniversary and for the first time the parade was led by a New Orleans Jazz Marching Band.
The first DVD carried six music videos, two of which were new and one, which was reedited for the album. The two new videos were "Just The Way You Are" (stylized as "JUST THE WAY YOU ARE") and "show girl." The reedited music video was the album version of "That Ain't Cool," which featured American singer Fergie – the original was released on her Moon EP. Bonus features on the first DVD included six secret videos, which could be accessed by clicking on Kumi's left eye on the menu screen. A full version for the album's introduction was later performed during her Live Tour 2009 ~Trick~.
She requested that the production company let her go in 2009 as she felt that her character could not develop further and wanted to follow up on theatre opportunities. In April 2007 she appeared in the Doctor Who episodes "Daleks in Manhattan" and "Evolution of the Daleks" as Tallulah, a show girl whose opening scene involved singing to a musical number, for which Raison's father played the piano background as part of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales. In 2009, she was featured in the show Plus One. She was originally featured in the Comedy Showcase pilot in 2007, where she wore a fat suit.
Bel meanwhile decides that The Hour will run on the Wolfenden Report, but she finds it impossible to get participants. Show-girl Rosa-Maria visits Bel to tell her that Kiki has disappeared; Hector calls Laurie for help, unaware that he has contacted the person who assaulted her. Freddie is sure that he is on the track to uncovering the truth about Kiki, despite a warning from Commander Laurence Stern for the team to stay away from the story. An argument with McCain leads to a drunken Hector being escorted home by Stern and there Hector begins to recall an incident from their military past which throws doubt on his friend's character.
Leonard Maltin's Movie and Video Guide 2001. New York: Plume, 2000. (pg. 460); Gianni Franciolini's romantic comedy Love on the Riviera (1958),Blum, Daniel. Daniel Blum's Screen World 1965. Vol. 16. New York: Crown Publishers, 1966. (pg. 185); and many others. In 1958, De Luca joined Alessandra Panaro and Mario Riva as a show girl in the popular TV quiz show Il Musichiere (The Musician). She also had minor roles in "sword-and-sandal" and "muscleman" films, often being cast as a princess or slave girl, such as Sheba and the Gladiator (1959) and Sign of the Gladiator (1965). With the beginning of the 1960s, De Luca received more and more roles in commercial films.
Alice Faye (center), Jack Haley (left), Don Ameche, and Tyrone Power (right), in a trailer for Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938) Faye got her first major film break in 1934, when Lilian Harvey abandoned the lead role in a film version of George White's 1935 Scandals, in which Vallee was also to appear. Hired first to perform a musical number with Vallee, Faye ended up as the female lead. She became a hit with film audiences of the 1930s, particularly when Fox production head Darryl F. Zanuck made her his protégée. He softened Faye from a wisecracking show girl to a youthful, and yet somewhat motherly figure, such as her roles in a few Shirley Temple films.
The character's original CBS biography (which has since been removed) stated that she was born in Bozeman, Montana on March 26, 1963 and raised by her mother, Lily Flynn (Anita Gillette), a former show girl ("Weeping Willows", "Kiss-Kiss, Bye-Bye"). This biography was later revised. The new version states that the character was born in Las Vegas and raised by her single mother, who worked as a cocktail waitress and showgirl at various jobs along the West Coast.Marrinan 2006, p. 34. The seventh-season episode "Living Legend" established that Willows was 16 years old (portrayed by Amy Scott) in 1975, the year the movie Jaws was released, which places her year of birth in either 1958 or 1959.
Born in Georgetown, Colorado in 1874, Hoyt made his Broadway debut in 1905 in the play The Prince Consort, which was not a success. He also appeared in Ferenc Molnár's The Devil in 1908, and made his final stand on the Great White Way in The Great Name in 1911. Hoyt made one silent movie in 1914, a comedy short called The Scrub Lady, but his film acting career did not begin in earnest until 1916 when he appeared in another short, The Heart of a Show Girl. From that time until 1944, not a year passed without a film being released that Hoyt had acted in - and frequently a number of them, up to a dozen or so.
In 2000 performed the credit and end titles song for the RAI TV series "Una donna per amico 2" (A woman as a friend 2) where she also plays a role in the second episode. In 2007 she has been the lead show-girl of Canale 5 La Corrida's most followed edition of last 10 years, dancing and singing live every Saturday, accompanied by Master Pregadio and 16 dancers. In June 2007 her last CD 'A modo mio' (My way), completely self-produced and distributed by EDEL, has been released. It features the most famous songs from world's most famous musicals re-arranged in pop, lounge, dance, Latino and rock styles, where lyrics have been re- written in Italian by Arianna herself.
Three women who went to the same elementary school, Mary (Joan Blondell), Ruth (Bette Davis), and Vivian (Ann Dvorak), meet again as young adults after some time apart. They each light a cigarette from the same match and discuss the superstition that such an act is unlucky and that Vivian, the last to light her cigarette, will be the first to die. Mary is a show girl who has established stability in her life after spending some time in a reform school, while Ruth works as a stenographer. Vivian is the best off of the three, married to successful lawyer Robert Kirkwood (Warren William) and with a young son Robert Jr. (Buster Phelps), but she has grown dissatisfied with her life.
The album won Best Cabaret CD from BroadwayWorld.com. Other collaborations include composer Jonathan Cooper on his "Moon Behind the Clouds" song cycle, the cabaret show Girl Talk with Mari Wilson and Claire Martin, and Gwyneth Herbert which toured intermittently for ten years and the trio Durga Rising with tabla player Kuljit Bhamra and pianist Russell Churney. During 2015, her collaborations included performances with John McDaniel on both sides of the Atlantic. Since 2015, she has recorded and toured on both sides of the Atlantic with pianist Laurence Hobgood, with whom she recorded Shelter from the Storm (2016) featuring three original compositions alongside songs by Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell, Rodgers and Hammerstein, David Bowie, Stephen Sondheim, Bruce Springsteen, and Peter Gabriel.
In October, Karavan signs up with the ARY Musik Records.Pakium The Muzik Record Signs Karavan for their 4th New Album Saara Jahan. Retrieved on 6 May 2010. On 4 March 2010, the first single, "Kaisay Mumkin Hai", from Karavan's fourth studio album was aired on ARY Musik. On 30 March, the band was welcomed at Play TV show "Girl Power" with DJ Sanam talking about the new video and album. On 10 April, Karavan performed at TIP College and the band debuted "Kaisay Mumkin Hai" for the first time live on stage. The band also featured at Radio One FM 91 on Dino's show. On 26 April 2010, The Muzik Records released Saara Jahan nationwide and promos of the album were launched on television for the promotion of the album.
However, when Shaw performed both songs on a British television show, "Girl Don't Come" drew the best reaction and radio airplay: it was as "Girl Don't Come" that the single entered the UK chart (dated 12 December 1964) to peak at No. 3 in the week of 23 January 1965. Although not one of Shaw's three UK No. 1's, "Girl Don't Come" is widely regarded as Shaw's signature hit and – unlike "Puppet on a String" – the singer has grown to appreciate the track to which she initially had an aversion. "Girl Don't Come" has also been recorded by Debby Boone, Cher, Ronnie Dyson (as the B-side to "(If You Let Me Make Love to You Then) Why Can't I Touch You?"), Eddie Rambeau and Ronnie Spector.
Michelle Visage (born Michelle Lynn Shupack; September 20, 1968) is an American Radio DJ, singer, actress, media personality, television host and show girl. Originally gaining recognition as a member of the band Seduction, she earned five singles with the group that charted on the Billboard Hot 100 before reaching the top of the dance charts in 1993 as lead vocalist in The S.O.U.L. S.Y.S.T.E.M.. She co-hosted The RuPaul Show from 1996 to 1998, alongside frequent collaborator RuPaul. After working as a radio DJ across the country from 1996 to 2011, she returned to television in 2011 on the American reality competition series RuPaul's Drag Race, where she has served as a permanent judge since the show's third season. She has also served as a judge on each season of its spin-off series, RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars, RuPaul's Drag Race UK and Canada's Drag Race.
Three weeks later, Jolson saw a production of George M. Cohan's Rise of Rosie O'Reilly, and noticed she was in the show's cast. Now knowing she was going about her Broadway career, Jolson attended another one of her shows, Show Girl, and rose from the audience and engaged in her duet of "Liza". After this moment, the show's producer, Florenz Ziegfeld, asked Jolson to join the cast and continue to sing duets with Keeler. Jolson accepted Ziegfeld's offer and during their tour with Ziegfeld, the two started dating and were married on September 21, 1928. In 1935, Al and Ruby adopted a son, Jolson's first child, whom they named "Al Jolson Jr." In 1939, however—despite a marriage that was considered to be more successful than his previous ones—Keeler left Jolson. After their 1940 divorce, she remarried, to John Homer Lowe, with whom she would have four children and remain married until his death in 1969.Oberfirst, Robert, Al Jolson: You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet (1980) Barnes & Co., London, pp. 223–59. In 1944, while giving a show at a military hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Jolson met a young X-ray technologist, Erle Galbraith.

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