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Neo-Grec architecture in the tomb of actor Bogumil Dawison in Dresden, Germany. Néo-Grec was a Neoclassical Revival style of the mid-to-late 19th century that was popularized in architecture, the decorative arts, and in painting during France's Second Empire, the reign of Napoleon III (1852–1870).
Raymond Wallace Bolger (/ ˈ b oʊ l dʒ ər /; [2] January 10, 1904 – January 15, 1987) [3] was an American actor, dancer, singer, vaudevillian, and stage performer (particularly musical theater) who started his movie career in the silent-film era. Bolger was a major Broadway performer in the 1930s and beyond.
Jordan Bolger (born 1994), Afro-British actor; Kevin Bolger (born 1993), American cross-country skier; Laurie Bolger (born 1989), English poet, stand-up and presenter; Maggie Keenan-Bolger (born 1983), American actress; Marguerite Bolger, Irish judge; Martin Bolger (1906–1991), Australian rules footballer; Merv Bolger (1919-1993), Australian ...
Youheum Son is truly an extreme minimalist. Aside from her cat's bed, a few string lights and flowers, Son's apartment, which she shares with her minimalist sister, fully emulates her dedication ...
Picture Pages is a 1978–1984 American educational television program aimed at preschool children, presented by Bill Cosby—teaching lessons on basic arithmetic, geometry, word association and drawing through a series of interactive lessons that used a workbook that viewers would follow along with the lesson.
Bolger was a prolific writer and wrote many books, the last being Boats with an Open Mind, as well as hundreds of magazine articles on small craft designs, chiefly in Woodenboat, Small Boat Journal and Messing About in Boats. Bolger died on May 24, 2009, of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. His wife explained that "[h]is mind had slipped in the ...
Wilhelm Boger invented the "Boger swing", an instrument of torture.Reported after the war by his secretary, Frau Braun: It was a meter-long iron bar suspended by chains hung from the ceiling ...
Classic Googie sign at Warren, Ohio drive-in. Googie's beginnings are with the Streamline Moderne architecture of the 1930s. [16] Alan Hess, one of the most knowledgeable writers on the subject, writes in Googie: Ultra Modern Road Side Architecture that mobility in Los Angeles during the 1930s was characterized by the initial influx of the automobile and the service industry that evolved to ...