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"Mona Lisa" is a popular song written by Ray Evans and Jay Livingston for the Paramount Pictures film Captain Carey, U.S.A. (1949), in which it was performed by Sergio de Karlo and a recurrent accordion motif. The title and lyrics refer to the renaissance portrait Mona Lisa painted by Leonardo da Vinci.
Mona Lisa Smile is a 2003 American drama film produced by Revolution Studios and Columbia Pictures in association with Red Om Films Productions, directed by Mike Newell, written by Lawrence Konner and Mark Rosenthal, and starring Julia Roberts, Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles, and Maggie Gyllenhaal.
Lyle Lovett covered the song for the 1998 film Hope Floats; it was later included as the title track on his 2003 album Smile: Songs from the Movies. Barbra Streisand recorded her own version for The Movie Album as well as for the soundtrack of Mona Lisa Smile in 2003. Westlife covered the song on their 2004 album ...Allow Us to Be Frank. The ...
Mona Lisa Smile follows Roberts' character Katherine Ann Watson as she accepts an Art History teaching position at Wellesley College in the 1950s and attempts to helps liberate the minds of her ...
The mysterious 'Mona Lisa' has captivated people for centuries, and there has been much discussion about which particular mood the subject is expressing. Researchers decode mystery behind Mona ...
The 1950 song "Mona Lisa" recorded by Nat King Cole. The 1952 short story "The Smile" by Ray Bradbury, published in his 1959 collection A Medicine for Melancholy; The 1984 song "Mona Lisa Lost Her Smile" recorded by David Allan Coe. The 2011 song "The Ballad of Mona Lisa" by American rock band Panic! at the Disco.
"Moaning Lisa Smile" is a song by English alternative rock band Wolf Alice. It was released on 3 April 2014 as a single from their second EP , Creature Songs (2014). [ 1 ] It also appears on the US edition of their debut album, My Love Is Cool (2015).
"Mona Lisa Lost Her Smile" is a song written by Johnny Cunningham and recorded by David Allan Coe. It was the first single from Coe's 1984 album Just Divorced, and was released to radio in early 1984. The song is Coe's highest-charting single, with a peak of number two on the U.S. country music charts.