Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Flying premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam (IDFA) on November 22, 2006, and domestically at the Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2007; in both cases, it appeared as a Special Event. Following Sundance, Flying appeared at festivals in Croatia, Sweden, Greece, Israel, Canada, England, Italy, and France.
Dust Off and Dance is the sixth studio album by American singer Tiffany, released in May 2005.Its style is electronica and dance music, representing a departure from the styles she has used in earlier albums, and of particular interest to dance clubs, where its songs have achieved some success.
Free flying is a skydiving discipline that began in the late 1980s, involving falling free in various vertical orientations, as opposed to the traditional "belly-to-earth" orientation. The discipline is known to have originated when Olav Zipser began experimenting with non-traditional forms of Body flight .
Tiffany Shlain (born April 8, 1970) [1] is an American filmmaker, artist, and author. Described by the public radio program On Being as "an internet pioneer", [ 2 ] Shlain is the co-founder of the Webby Awards and the founder of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences .
Flying Free is the fourth studio album by Native American band Black Eagle, released on March 9, 2004 and recorded in July 2002. It received the Grammy Award for Best Native American Music Album in 2004 .
"Feelings of Forever" is a song by American singer Tiffany. The song was released on May 27, 1988, as the fourth and final single from her first album Tiffany (1987). [3] The song was written by Mark Paul and John Duarte, and was produced by George Tobin.
"Flying" is the fifth single by Liverpool Britpop band Cast, fronted by ex the La's bassist John Power. The song was released as a standalone single on 12 October 1996 and reached number four on the UK Singles Chart , becoming the band's highest-charting single in the UK.
The same thing happens to Wolfgang, then Albert Brayne. Then a half-dozen of frightened students named Violet, Jane Plain, Penny Scilin, James, Tiffany, Stanley ZeBlucky, and Joe are all turned into monsters one-by-one. Ms. Grunkle flies on her broomstick to her house.