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The Old Cat and the Young Mouse (Le vieux chat et la jeune souris) is a late fable by Jean de la Fontaine (XII.5). [1] Written towards the end of his life, its grim conclusion is that 'Youth thinks its every wish will gain success; Old age is pitiless.'
An encore is then performed, featuring Izzard delivering the plot of the film Speed in French and explaining how his schoolboy French, ("la souris est sous la table, le chat est sur la chaise, et le singe est sur la branche") serves him in France itself.
Le Chat et la Souris (US title: Cat and Mouse, also known as Seven Suspects for Murder) is a 1975 French mystery film directed and written by Claude Lelouch. The film stars Michèle Morgan , Serge Reggiani and Jean-Pierre Aumont .
The Monkey and the Cat (Le singe et le chat, IX.17) The Mountain in Labour (La montagne qui accouche, V.10) The Mouse and the Oyster (Le rat et l'huître, VIII.9) The Mouse Turned into a Maid (La souris métamorphosée en fille, IX.7) The Oak and the Reed (Le chêne et le roseau, I.22) The Old Cat and the Young Mouse (Le vieux chat et la jeune ...
Le Chat et la souris: Claude Lelouch: 1975 La Bête: Walerian Borowczyk: 1976 C'était un rendez-vous: Claude Lelouch: 1976 Si c'était à refaire: Second Chance Claude Lelouch: 1976 À nous les petites Anglaises: Let's Get Those English Girls: Michel Lang: 1976 Le Bon et les méchants: Claude Lelouch: 1976 L'Argent de poche: Small Change ...
Palmire Louise Dumont (4 March 1855 – 4 February 1915), generally known as Madame Palmyre or Palmyre, was the manager and owner of two early gay bars in Paris in the 1890s–1900s: the lesbian bar La Souris (The Mouse) and the mixed Palmyr's Bar.
Le Chat is an adult, human-sized obese, anthropomorphic cat who typically wears a suit. He always has the same physical expression. He often comes up with elaborate reasonings which lead to hilariously absurd conclusions e.g. by taking metaphors literally or by adding increasingly unlikely what-ifs to ordinary situations.
La Maison du chat-qui-pelote (The House of the Cat and Racket) is a novel by Honoré de Balzac. It is the opening work in the Scènes de la vie privée ( transl. Scenes of Private Life ), which comprises the first volume of Balzac's La Comédie humaine .