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Groovy Girls Sleepover Club was a series of short, chapter books for early readers starring the main 6 Groovy Girls, who were Gwen, Reese, O'Ryan, Oki, Vanessa, and Yvette. The books each contained 80 pages and a few illustrations.
The video was shot in her friend's garden and posted in February 2007. She has since shot three more Groovy Dancing Girl videos. Her videos have received more than nine million hits. [4] Her short film "Solo Duet" was funded by the Irish Film Board and was shown in October 2009 at the Darklight Film Festival, a digital film festival. [5]
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Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Groovy People may refer to: "Groovy People", a song by Lou ...
It has been found in print as early as 1946, in Really the Blues, the autobiography of jazz saxophonist Mezz Mezzrow. [2] The word appears in advertising spots for the 1947 film Miracle on 34th Street , and in the same year the phrase “Everything’s groovy” was included on a 78 rpm recording of “ Open The Door, Richard ” sung by Walter ...
Most of the Goolies were (in look and sound) pop-culture echoes of the classic horror-film monsters created in the 1930s and 1940s, mostly by Universal Pictures. Shows consisted of fast-cut sequences of pun-filled jokes and short skits, and each episode included two pop songs, one performed by The Monster Trio (Drac, Frankie and Wolfie) and a ...
Denise Holly Hobbie (née Ulinskas; [1]: 102 born 1944) is an American writer, watercolorist [2]: 127 and illustrator. [3] She is best known for creating the American Greetings character which, originally unnamed, is now also called Holly Hobbie.
The artwork, based on Hobbie's own children and with rustic New England style of a bygone era, [2]: 128 became popular, and her originally nameless [3] character (identified earlier as "blue girl") became known as Holly Hobbie. As a contract artist, Hobbie worked with the Humorous Planning department at American Greetings under art director Rex ...